aggiehawg said:
Quote:
YA II PN is Yorkville Advisors, a well-known 'toxic lender', and capital provider of last resort
So this company is basically bankrupt too?
Yorkville? Let's just say the SEC has concerns with many OTC and microcap lenders, including Yorkville, Streeterville, and Almagarby's MicroCap, LLC, among others. Shareholders are well aware that these lenders often lead issuers into a "debt death spiral," ultimately driving their valuation down to $0.
That being said, they can provide liquidity where other lenders can't or won't (think payday loans)
Trump's DJT used Yorkville earlier this year
https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-media-stock-sale-shares-truth-social-yorkville-advisorsQuote:
Instead of hiring J.P. Morgan or another bank, Trump Media has entered into a deal to sell stock with a small New Jersey financial firm called Yorkville Advisors.
The firm has done similar deals with a number of small biotech companies, such as a firm trying to develop "cannabinoid pharmaceuticals" to treat autism and Alzheimer's. In 2021 it inked a high-profile deal with a meme stock electric vehicle startup called Lordstown Motors, whose stock has crashed from a peak of more than $400 to under $2 today.
Companies like Yorkville that offer such deals are not typically intending to hold on to the stock, experts said. They are playing a version of the middleman role, allowing Trump Media to easily sell shares when it wants to. The basic arrangement works like this: Trump Media has the option to sell Yorkville shares of itself up to $2.5 billion, a significant chunk of its current market value. Yorkville was paid a fee up front, and if Trump Media decides to sell shares, Yorkville will also get a discount 2.75% off the market price. Yorkville typically would turn around and immediately sell those shares to other buyers, pocketing the difference.