Lazydays Holdings Plummets 15% After Massive Asset Sale and Nasdaq Delisting News

MarketDash Editorial Team
11 days ago
Lazydays Holdings stock dropped sharply in after-hours trading following the completion of $143.5 million in asset sales that went entirely to debt repayment, leaving zero cash for the company. The RV retailer also faces imminent delisting from Nasdaq.

When a stock drops 45% during regular trading and then falls another 15% after hours, you know something dramatic is happening. For Lazydays Holdings (GORV), that something is a nearly complete liquidation.

The Florida-based RV retailer saw shares close at $0.36 in after-hours trading Wednesday, down from a regular session close of $0.42. According to market data, the stock had already tumbled 45.31% during normal trading hours.

The Asset Fire Sale

According to a Form 8-K filed with the SEC on Tuesday, Lazydays completed asset sales totaling approximately $143.5 million between November 19 and November 25. If you're thinking that sounds like a lifeline for a struggling company, think again.

Of those proceeds, roughly $140.8 million went straight to repaying senior secured debt under the company's Credit Agreement with Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company and First Horizon Bank. Transaction costs ate up another $2.7 million. The company retained exactly zero cash from the sale.

So essentially, Lazydays sold off $143.5 million in assets and ended up with nothing to show for it except fewer creditors breathing down their neck.

Insider Activity Amid the Chaos

Adding an interesting wrinkle to the story, Director James J. Fredlake filed a Form 144 with the SEC on Tuesday to sell 1,154 shares through J.P. Morgan Securities LLC. The filing indicates the shares will be sold by the James J. Fredlake Revocable Trust of 2017, with Fredlake serving as trustee.

Delisting Looms

The company also disclosed in Tuesday's filing that its common stock listing on Nasdaq is expected to terminate on Friday. That's typically the final chapter for a publicly traded company in distress.

A Devastating Year

The numbers tell a brutal story. Lazydays (GORV) shares have crashed 98.52% year-to-date. The stock now trades with a 52-week range of $0.42 to $33 and sports a market capitalization of just $1.66 million—a tiny fraction of the debt the company just paid off.

According to market analytics, GORV stock has been declining across all time periods, with no silver lining in sight for remaining shareholders.

Lazydays Holdings Plummets 15% After Massive Asset Sale and Nasdaq Delisting News

MarketDash Editorial Team
11 days ago
Lazydays Holdings stock dropped sharply in after-hours trading following the completion of $143.5 million in asset sales that went entirely to debt repayment, leaving zero cash for the company. The RV retailer also faces imminent delisting from Nasdaq.

When a stock drops 45% during regular trading and then falls another 15% after hours, you know something dramatic is happening. For Lazydays Holdings (GORV), that something is a nearly complete liquidation.

The Florida-based RV retailer saw shares close at $0.36 in after-hours trading Wednesday, down from a regular session close of $0.42. According to market data, the stock had already tumbled 45.31% during normal trading hours.

The Asset Fire Sale

According to a Form 8-K filed with the SEC on Tuesday, Lazydays completed asset sales totaling approximately $143.5 million between November 19 and November 25. If you're thinking that sounds like a lifeline for a struggling company, think again.

Of those proceeds, roughly $140.8 million went straight to repaying senior secured debt under the company's Credit Agreement with Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company and First Horizon Bank. Transaction costs ate up another $2.7 million. The company retained exactly zero cash from the sale.

So essentially, Lazydays sold off $143.5 million in assets and ended up with nothing to show for it except fewer creditors breathing down their neck.

Insider Activity Amid the Chaos

Adding an interesting wrinkle to the story, Director James J. Fredlake filed a Form 144 with the SEC on Tuesday to sell 1,154 shares through J.P. Morgan Securities LLC. The filing indicates the shares will be sold by the James J. Fredlake Revocable Trust of 2017, with Fredlake serving as trustee.

Delisting Looms

The company also disclosed in Tuesday's filing that its common stock listing on Nasdaq is expected to terminate on Friday. That's typically the final chapter for a publicly traded company in distress.

A Devastating Year

The numbers tell a brutal story. Lazydays (GORV) shares have crashed 98.52% year-to-date. The stock now trades with a 52-week range of $0.42 to $33 and sports a market capitalization of just $1.66 million—a tiny fraction of the debt the company just paid off.

According to market analytics, GORV stock has been declining across all time periods, with no silver lining in sight for remaining shareholders.