First Brands Creditors Face Near-Total Loss as $11 Billion Fraud Unravels Leveraged Loan Market
Court-supervised asset sales yield pennies on the dollar as one of 2025's largest bankruptcies exposes catastrophic failures in private credit due diligence and off-balance sheet financing oversight.
First Brands Group filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in September 2025 holding approximately $12 million in corporate bank accounts against liabilities exceeding $10 billion, a capital structure so damaged by alleged fraud that creditors now face recovery rates estimated in the low single digits.
The company’s most senior debt trades at 13-16 cents on the dollar, while second-tier loans fetch less than one cent and pre-bankruptcy first-lien debt quotes at 0.0625 cents — signaling creditor losses approaching 98% across much of the capital structure. The automotive parts manufacturer, which generated $5 billion in revenue in 2024 selling brands including FRAM filters, Raybestos brakes, and Autolite spark plugs, has become a stress test for the $1.7 trillion leveraged loan market and a referendum on private credit’s decade-long expansion.
The Anatomy of a $2.3 Billion Fraud
According to DCW Credit Analysis, the company’s debt under supply chain financing and accounts receivable factoring exceeded $3 billion, pushing total financial institution obligations above $11 billion. Federal prosecutors indicted founder Patrick James and his brother Edward James on January 29, 2026, charging them with intentionally bankrupting the company by inflating invoices for accounts receivable, falsifying financial payments, and hiding substantial liabilities from lenders.
The Fraud mechanics were sophisticated. Court filings reveal invoices inflated to 10x their actual value — a $2.3 million invoice package listed at $11.2 million, according to bankruptcy court documents. The Justice Department accused the company of ‘double-pledging its trade receivables to third-party investors,’ with creditor Raistone claiming $2.3 billion in receivables ‘vanished’ from the company.
Utah-based equipment financier Onset Financial provided short-duration financing secured by First Brands’ inventory in exchange for average internal rates of return of 300%, with the creditors’ committee labeling Onset a ‘net winner’ after collecting $2.9 billion in repayments on $2.5 billion in financing while still claiming $1.9 billion owed, according to ABF Journal.
Wall Street’s Multibillion-Dollar Exposure
Major financial institutions reported staggering exposure: UBS claimed over $500 million through supply chain financing agreements, Jefferies Group held $715 million in receivables through its Leucadia Asset Management fund, and a Norinchukin Bank-Mitsui joint venture reported $1.75 billion in trade financing exposure, as reported by Wikipedia. UBS projected 70% recovery on its O’Connor working capital funds by year-end 2025, implying permanent losses exceeding $150 million.
The bankruptcy’s creditor list reads like a who’s who of alternative asset management. Marathon Asset Management held over $280 million in First Brands debt, alongside major private credit firms including Monroe Capital, Antares Capital, Sagard, Värde Partners, and Franklin Templeton affiliate Alcentra, according to FundFire analysis.
| Institution | Exposure | Type |
|---|---|---|
| Onset Financial | $1.9 billion | Inventory financing |
| Norinchukin/Mitsui JV | $1.75 billion | Trade financing |
| Jefferies/Point Bonita | $715 million | Receivables |
| UBS O’Connor | $500 million+ | Supply chain finance |
| Marathon Asset Mgmt | $280 million+ | Term loans |
The DIP Loan That Imploded
Marathon Asset Management’s CEO Bruce Richards characterized First Brands as a ‘great company, bad balance sheet’ while structuring the $1.1 billion debtor-in-possession financing, then sold the firm’s entire stake in the new-money DIP at or above 105 cents, according to distressed debt analysis. Within 72 days, the super-senior DIP loan collapsed to 63 cents, then plummeted to 30 cents by December 12 — an unprecedented impairment for bankruptcy financing.
Former bankruptcy judge Bruce Markell, now at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law, told Transport Topics: ‘I’ve never heard of that happening this close to the actual approval of the loan by the court’, referencing the DIP collapse. The failure signals that even the most senior, court-approved bankruptcy financing can vaporize when fraud allegations undermine asset valuations.
Covenant-Lite Lending and the Greensill Echo
The First Brands collapse bears disturbing parallels to the 2021 Greensill Capital implosion. Patrick James received tens of millions from Greensill Capital starting in 2015 through invoice-linked funding; after Greensill’s 2021 collapse amid scandal, James raised additional billions largely from private credit firms marketing ‘asset-backed’ lending as comparatively low risk, according to Wikipedia.
The bankruptcy exposed systemic risks in leveraged loans and high-yield debt markets, with covenant-lite loans allowing concealed financial deterioration that led to a liquidity crisis and rushed bankruptcy filing without restructuring, warns AINews investment analysis. Regulatory filings indicated lenders earned double-digit yields on First Brands’ off-balance-sheet facilities, with some investors unaware of their exposure extent and firms like UBS arguing credit risk was tied to large customers like Walmart.
The leveraged loan market has ballooned to $1.7 trillion, with covenant-lite loans — which lack traditional financial maintenance requirements — comprising over 80% of new issuance. First Brands’ fraud remained undetected partly because these loans don’t require regular financial reporting to lenders, allowing companies to deteriorate without triggering early warning mechanisms.
Job Losses and Manufacturing Hollowing
On February 27, 2026, First Brands filed multiple WARN notices in Ohio announcing at least four location closures and elimination of more than 1,200 jobs, stating it had pursued sale processes and outside funding but ‘saw no path forward to maintain operations at these facilities’, according to AOL reporting. Facilities in Cleveland, Greenville, and Bowling Green shuttered, with 302 employees at the FRAM Greenville plant terminated effective April 30.
The company employed approximately 26,000 people worldwide, including about 6,000 in the United States, per Bondoro case analysis. In January 2026, First Brands announced winding down its Autolite, Brake Parts Inc., and Cardone subsidiaries after being unable to secure funding — legacy American Manufacturing brands with century-long histories.
‘We don’t know whether this case is a business with fraud attached or a fraud with a business attached.’
— Robert Stark, creditor attorney, January 7, 2026 bankruptcy hearing
Market Implications and Contagion Risk
First Brands added 32 basis points to the leveraged loan default rate in September 2025, placing ninth on the leaderboard for top 10 largest defaults, according to PitchBook. Moody’s reported the trailing 12-month U.S. leveraged loan default rate reached 5.9% through September 2025, with bond defaults at 3.7%, per Charles Schwab analysis.
The trade credit insurance sector faces particular stress. Morningstar DBRS estimated base case insured losses of $300-600 million linked to First Brands’ receivables program, with adverse scenarios potentially exceeding $1 billion across trade credit insurers and reinsurers, as detailed in their October 13, 2025 research note.