Tide turning against ‘hyper-dilutive’ shipping stock sales

Tide turning against ‘hyper-dilutive’ shipping stock sales

a photo of NASDAQ; shipping stocks face controversy
Several Nasdaq-listed microcap shipping names have conducted highly dilutive offerings. (Photo: Flickr/Sami Keinanen)

Operator: “Your next question is from David Cohen.”

Cohen: “Yes, what is the current plan to destroy stockholder value as you did with Imperial Petroleum?”

StealthGas CEO Harry Vafias: “Next question please.”

Cohen: “What is the plan? …” (Operator hangs up on Cohen.)

That was an exchange during the latest quarterly call of StealthGas (NASDAQ: GASS), whose spinoff Imperial Petroleum (NASDAQ: IMPP) is one of numerous Greek-owned shipping companies that raised millions via dilutive share offerings handled by New York investment bank Maxim Group.

It’s no solace to all the shipping shareholders who’ve already been burned — these offerings decimated share values — but resistance is building, and not just on conference call Q&As.


Ridgebury Tankers CFO Hew Crooks lashed out at Larry Glassberg, Maxim’s co-head of investment banking, on the stage at the Marine Money Week conference in June, alleging in front of a packed house: “What’s being done by your firm in shipping is damaging everybody.”

Activist shareholders are now in motion. Galloway Capital is targeting Imperial Petroleum. Greek shipping magnate George Economou is going after Performance Shipping (NASDAQ: PSHG) and OceanPal (NASDAQ: OP), two other companies that have done controversial stock offerings.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has initiated legal or administrative proceedings against two of the players that have been involved in dilutive shipping share sales, including Maxim Group on Friday.

SEC censures Maxim

The SEC imposed sanctions on Maxim, including a small $800,000 civil penalty, a censure and a cease-and-desist on future violations. Maxim consented to the penalties without admitting or denying the SEC’s findings.

The SEC determined that Maxim violated securities laws on execution of short sales and submission of suspicious activity reports (SARs) from “at least January 2018 through January 2019.”

There’s no mention of shipping shares, or any specific stocks, in the SEC statements on Maxim. The SARs violations were related to over-the-counter (OTC) stocks, whereas shipping microcaps trade on Nasdaq. The SEC said Maxim failed to investigate suspicious activity that “may be indicative of … pumps and dumps and other manipulative activity.”

The short-sales violations were not specifically linked to OTC stocks. The SEC said Maxim was not “locating” shares prior to effecting short sales. When selling stocks short, investors have to borrow the shares they sell, and get a “locate” from their broker-dealer confirming they can borrow enough shares to short the stock.