Recent weeks have seen the collapse of U.S. auto parts supplier First Brands Group, which filed for bankruptcy with over $10 billion in debt due to excessive borrowing for acquisitions, financial misconduct, and external tariff pressures. The fallout has impacted financial institutions like Jefferies and sparked broader concerns about trade financing risks and due diligence standards in private credit markets, while amplifying fears of corporate debt contagion.
Just weeks before First Brands’ collapse, used-car dealer Tricolor also declared bankruptcy, raising alarms about potential systemic issues in corporate lending. Federal investigators are now probing both cases. Below are key details about First Brands and the financial practices under scrutiny:
**What Led to First Brands’ Downfall?** Founded in 2013 by Malaysian-American entrepreneur Patrick James, First Brands (originally Crown Group) embarked on an aggressive acquisition spree after buying TriCo Products in 2014. Over the next decade, it absorbed over 20 companies, rebranding twice before settling as First Brands Group. At its peak, the firm employed 26,000 globally, supplying auto parts like wipers and brake pads to retailers such as Walmart, AutoZone, and O’Reilly Auto Parts.
However, its debt-fueled expansion masked underlying issues. Suppliers and former employees revealed payment delays as early as two years before its September 2025 bankruptcy filing. Creditors later questioned the firm’s borrowing levels and the reliability of its financial reports, which had undergone significant restatements. Tariffs imposed by former President Donald Trump on auto imports further strained cash flow.
Bankruptcy filings exposed billions in off-balance-sheet debt, and the company sued ex-CEO James in November 2025, alleging he misappropriated hundreds of millions—a claim he denies.
**Questionable Financial Practices** First Brands relied heavily on trade financing to bridge cash gaps. While common in manufacturing, its methods allegedly heightened counterparty risks.
1. **Factoring**: Typically, suppliers sell receivables to financiers ("factors"), who collect directly from end buyers (e.g., Walmart). But First Brands reportedly routed payments through itself, adding risk. Creditors now claim billions from such deals are missing. 2. **Supply Chain Financing**: Here, buyers (or their clients) arrange third-party advances to suppliers. First Brands amassed $2.3 billion in factoring debt and $800 million in supply-chain financing debt—figures that stunned Wall Street.
Investigators are examining whether the firm double-pledged collateral and if accounts meant to repay debts were emptied.
**Impact on Financial Institutions** Jefferies, First Brands’ lead debt arranger since 2014, faced reputational damage after a $6 billion refinancing deal collapsed amid creditor scrutiny. Its investment arm, Leucadia Asset Management, holds a stake in hedge fund Point Bonita Capital, which had 25% of its $3 billion trade-finance portfolio tied to First Brands’ receivables. Jefferies claims its exposure is under $50 million, but shares fell 19% post-bankruptcy.
Other exposed entities include UBS Group, Norinchukin Bank, Mitsui & Co., and regional lender Western Alliance Bancorp. Smaller players like Onset Financial ($1.9 billion owed) and Raistone (80% revenue dependent on First Brands) also suffered.
**Broader Implications for Private Credit** While most of First Brands’ on-book debt wasn’t from private lenders, its trade financing partly involved the $1.7 trillion private credit sector. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon recently criticized due diligence industry-wide after Tricolor’s failure, likening hidden financial risks to “cockroaches.” Blue Owl Capital’s Marc Lipschultz countered that Tricolor’s collapse reflected banking failures, not private credit’s.
**Next Steps** With federal prosecutors investigating, interim CEO Charles Moore (appointed in September 2025) oversees restructuring. Creditors seek clarity on profits, cash needs, and off-book liabilities, though recovery prospects remain unclear.