RCI Hospitality Holdings Inc. (RICK) is going through what you might call "a rough patch." Last week, the company announced that CEO Eric Langan and CFO Bradley Chhay are stepping down, which would be notable on its own. But the timing makes this resignation announcement particularly interesting.
A Very Expensive Buyback
According to the company's Friday press release, Langan will stick around on the board while Travis Reese and Albert Molina step in as interim CEO and CFO, respectively. Chhay will remain employed by the company in some capacity. Conspicuously absent from the announcement? Any actual explanation for why this is happening.
Here's where it gets intriguing. Just days before this leadership shuffle, RCI Hospitality announced a massive $30 million stock buyback. The company acquired 821,000 shares from hedge fund ADW Capital Partners, L.P., which had been a major shareholder.
But here's the eyebrow-raising part: those shares were purchased at $36.54 each, a whopping 50% premium over the current market price of $24.36. The deal structure included $8 million in cash and $22 million in two-year seller financing at 12% interest.
Now, who owns ADW Capital Partners? Adam Wyden, the son of Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR), a Democratic senator from Oregon. The optics here have sparked considerable speculation on social media about whether this adds another layer of complexity to the company's already substantial legal troubles.
Neither RCI Hospitality nor ADW Capital immediately responded to requests for comment on this matter.
The Legal Quagmire
The leadership changes and unusual buyback are happening against a backdrop of serious legal problems. Earlier this year, the adult entertainment company and five of its executives were indicted on multi-million dollar tax fraud and bribery charges. The allegations? That the company had been bribing a New York state tax auditor to dodge over $8 million in sales taxes.
Last year, activist short-seller Edwin Dorsey of Bear Cave Research called the company "uninvestable" while highlighting a destructive fire at one of RCI's nightclub locations.
Before that, Dorsey had documented raids at the company's Houston office and New York location, noting that "numerous law enforcement agents were both outside and within public view inside of Rick's property, although there did not appear to be any emergency or emergency vehicles in the area."
The Market Reaction
Investors have not been kind. The stock has plummeted 74.52% since hitting its all-time high in January 2023, with a 57.61% decline year-to-date as mounting legal concerns weigh on the company. Following Friday's management change announcement, shares fell another 1.10%, closing at $24.36.
RCI Hospitality shows unfavorable performance across the board in market data analytics, with negative price trends in the short, medium, and long term. For a company already dealing with indictments, fires, and raids, paying a 50% premium to buy back shares from a politically connected hedge fund right before its top executives resign certainly raises questions about what's happening behind the scenes.