Investor Sues Chinese E-Cigarette Maker RLX for Allegedly Misrepresenting Risks
June 10 2021 - 6:23PM
Dow Jones News
By Mark Maurer
An investor filed a lawsuit against RLX Technology Inc.,
claiming the Chinese vaping company overstated its financials and
misrepresented potential regulatory risks when it filed the
paperwork for its initial public offering in the U.S.
The lawsuit, submitted Wednesday by shareholder Alex Garnett in
the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York,
alleges RLX's registration statement from last October omitted the
impact of ongoing efforts by Chinese regulators to tighten sales of
electronic cigarettes.
Companies under rules established by the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission have to disclose any known events or
uncertainties that at the time of an IPO caused or were likely to
not represent future earnings.
Mr. Garnett's suit, which he filed on behalf of other RLX
investors, comes amid increased scrutiny of Chinese companies
trading on U.S. stock exchanges because of concerns about the
accuracy of their financial statements. Among those was
coffee-chain Luckin Coffee Inc., which last year delisted from the
Nasdaq Stock Market after disclosing that some employees fabricated
hundreds of millions of dollars in sales.
RLX didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
Beijing-based RLX, which was founded in 2018, went public on the
New York Stock Exchange in January. The offering raised $1.39
billion, and was one of the largest global IPOs in the first
quarter, according to data provider Dealogic Ltd. Its stock price
has fallen sharply since then, in part as a result of potential
regulatory changes in China. RLX's shares traded at $9.15 on
Thursday, down about 69% since its debut.
Chinese regulators in 2019 called on companies and marketplaces
to stop selling e-cigarettes online, in an effort to curb underage
vaping. Regulators then in March 2021 proposed rules that would
designate these cigarettes as tobacco products, raising scrutiny on
the businesses that sell them.
Although RLX sells vaping products in China, privately held RELX
International distributes them abroad.
The lawsuit alleges investors purchased RLX shares at
artificially inflated prices, in part because the company omitted
and misrepresented information in the registration statement. As
the stock price dropped, RLX investors lost hundreds of millions of
dollars, the lawsuit said. Mr. Garnett bought 300 shares at a price
of $27.87, according to a filing. Mr. Garnett didn't immediately
respond to a request for comment.
At least two other law firms, Labaton Sucharow LLP and Schall
Law Firm, in recent weeks said they are investigating on behalf of
investors to determine whether RLX failed to disclose relevant
information to investors. Rosen Law Firm PA and Bronstein, Gewirtz
& Grossman LLC, among others, said Thursday they are seeking
RLX investors who want to join a class-action suit.
RLX on June 2 reported revenue of 2.4 billion Chinese yuan,
equivalent to $366.1 million, for the quarter ended March 31, up
from 368.6 million yuan the prior-year period. The company booked a
net loss of 267 million yuan, or $40.8 million, compared with a
profit of 12.1 million yuan during the prior-year quarter.
The company's financial statements in recent months have raised
questions from accounting experts. Among the issues is RLX's
unusually high ratio of cash and securities to total assets,
according to Jacek Welc, assistant professor of corporate finance
and accounting at Poland's Wroclaw University of Economics and
Business. Cash and financial assets represented 86% of the
company's total assets for the nine-month period ended Sept. 30,
Mr. Welc said. That percentage is higher than those of five
international companies that were accused of cash-based accounting
fraud since 2008, according to Mr. Welc, including Germany's
Wirecard AG.
"The amount of cash on hand is kind of eye popping," said Erik
Gerding, a law professor at the University of Colorado, who
reviewed RLX's prospectus. "Even apart from financial fraud,
there's a question of where they're going to invest this cash and
why they wouldn't give it out to shareholders."
Write to Mark Maurer at mark.maurer@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 10, 2021 18:13 ET (22:13 GMT)
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