Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

KillShot

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May 25, 2010
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This is rather interesting and alarming at the same time. There is much more to this article and you can find it all using the provided source link below.

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Scarborough, Maine --

Lined up in a gun rack beneath mounted deer heads is a Bushmaster Carbon 15, a matte-black semiautomatic rifle that looks as if it belongs to a SWAT team. On another rack rests a Teflon-coated Prairie Panther from DPMS Firearms, a supplier to the U.S. Border Patrol and security agencies in Iraq. On a third is a Remington 750 Woodsmaster, a popular hunting rifle.

The variety of rifles and shotguns on sale here at Cabela's, the national sporting goods chain, is a testament to America's enduring gun culture. But, to a surprising degree, it is also a testament to something else: Wall Street deal-making.

In recent years, many top-selling brands - including the 195-year-old Remington Arms, as well as Bushmaster Firearms and DPMS, leading makers of military-style semiautomatics - have quietly passed into the hands of a single private company. It is called the Freedom Group - and it is the most powerful and mysterious force in the U.S. commercial gun industry today.

Never heard of it?

You're not alone. Even within gun circles, the Freedom Group is something of an enigma. Its rise has been so swift that it has become the subject of wild speculation and grassy-knoll conspiracy theories. In the realm of consumer rifles and shotguns - long guns, in the trade - it is unrivaled in its size and reach. By its own count, the Freedom Group sold 1.2 million long guns and 2.6 billion rounds of ammunition in the 12 months ended March 2010, the most recent year for which figures are publicly available.

Behind this giant is Cerberus Capital Management, the private investment company that first came to widespread attention when it acquired Chrysler in 2007. (Chrysler later had to be rescued by taxpayers). With far less fanfare, Cerberus, through the Freedom Group, has been buying big names in guns and ammo.

From its headquarters in Manhattan, Cerberus has assembled a remarkable arsenal. It began with Bushmaster, which until recently was based here in Maine. Unlike military counterparts like automatic M-16s, rifles like those from Bushmaster don't spray bullets with one trigger pull. But, with gas-powered mechanisms, semiautomatics can fire rapid follow-up shots as fast as the trigger can be squeezed. They are often called "black guns" because of their color. The police tied a Bushmaster XM15 rifle to shootings in the Washington sniper case in 2002.

After Bushmaster, the Freedom Group moved in on Remington, which traces its history to the days of flintlocks and today is supplying M24 sniper rifles to the government of Afghanistan and making handguns for the first time in decades. The group has also acquired Marlin Firearms, which turned out a special model for Annie Oakley, as well as Dakota Arms, a maker of high-end big-game rifles. It has bought DPMS Firearms, another maker of semiautomatic, military-style rifles, as well as manufacturers of ammunition and tactical clothing.

"We believe our scale and product breadth are unmatched within the industry," the Freedom Group said in a filing last year with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Some gun enthusiasts have claimed that the power behind the company is actually George Soros, the hedge-fund billionaire and liberal activist. Soros, these people have warned, is buying U.S. gun companies so he can dismantle the industry, Second Amendment be damned.

The chatter grew so loud that the National Rifle Association issued a statement in October denying the rumors.

"NRA has had contact with officials from Cerberus and Freedom Group for some time," the NRA assured its members. "The owners and investors involved are strong supporters of the Second Amendment and are avid hunters and shooters."

Soros isn't behind the Freedom Group, but, ultimately, another financier is: Stephen Feinberg, the chief executive of Cerberus.</div></div>

Source - San Francisco Chronicle
 
Re: Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

No tinfoil hats here.

I've not heard of Freedom Group but a guy on Facebook informed me that they've been around for awhile and are pro second amendment.

I guess it's alarming to me because when one company begins buying out large gun manufacturers, it makes me wonder why. It's a little different that Sprint buying out Nextel or some of the acquisitions and mergers we've seen.
 
Re: Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

SF Chronicle/AP/Reuters are just scaring up the people too stupid to know that this has been going on for a while:

http://bulletin.accurateshooter.com/2010/01/freedom-group-cerberus-acquires-barnes-bullets/

Formula: Scary headline filled with information that is years old, and, of course, hardly anyone would take the time to fact check.

excerpt regarding this type of "reporting" in an upcoming blog post:

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This is how newspapers and MSM television work. They rarely report anything verifiably substantial; instead, they rely on blurbs, headlines, and sensational claims that require hours upon hours of research and analytical abilities to even begin scratching the surface. Most lead to dead ends, rabbit holes, and loopity-loops which pull a 180 turn. By the time one even hits a wall, meets the rattlesnake engorged on baby rabbits, or regains equilibrium- the inspiration for the journey is largely forgotten or just passé.

The end result: the fear is inculcated, associated with key words, and once again society is engineered to look at an issue with the same intellect as a friggin' dog who looks for cues to its dinner time.
</div></div>
 
Re: Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

Lookin forward to the write up, CS1983.

This article is on Fox Nation which had linked it from SFGate. I should've known something was up when seeing it is an article out of a Commifornia newspaper.
 
Re: Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

The N.Y. Times had a good article about the Freedom Group last Sun., maybe. No conspiracy. Guys think guns are a money making thing. I'm buying.
 
Re: Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

Stephen Feinberg is the head of Cerberus and supports progun politicians. Another pro gun person on the BOD of Cerberua is Dan Quayle. This post may be crossing the line into politics, but it's worth putting the Soros rumors to bed.

This is a link to the list of their senior management: http://www.cerberuscapital.com/Biographies.aspx
 
Re: Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

Cerberus=Good guys. They often buy failing companies to piece them out, but have not done so with the firearms companies they have purchased. Just infused lots of money to start making them profitable again. I see no problem with that other than to my pocketbook if you know what I mean.
 
Re: Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

I'm not a huge Cerberus fan. Remington is not the same company they used to be they lost some QC. There used to be a time when remington was the the savage of the gun market in accuracy. They bought Dakota arms out also. DPMS, Bushmaster is one thing, but dakota arms that's something that shouldn't be bought out IMO. Known about Cerberus for quite some time now.
 
Re: Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Blackops_2</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I'm not a huge Cerberus fan. Remington is not the same company they used to be they lost some QC. There used to be a time when Remington was the the savage of the gun market in accuracy. They bought Dakota arms out also. DPMS, Bushmaster is one thing, but Dakota arms that's something that shouldn't be bought out IMO. Known about Cerberus for quite some time now.</div></div> Cerberus usually buys companies that are having trouble. So maybe a change in direction was what the company needs to be profitable or it would just go out of business.
 
Re: Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

For dakota arms i can see that. As the market for 6000$ custom classic rifles is not that big. But remington i would hardly think needed any rescuing, i think they got it for profit.
 
Re: Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Blackops_2</div><div class="ubbcode-body">For dakota arms i can see that. As the market for 6000$ custom classic rifles is not that big. But remington i would hardly think needed any rescuing, i think they got it for profit.</div></div>
I don't think so after the whole remmy trigger issue that has been coming to light.
 
Re: Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

The firearms market is very fragmented with widely divergent standards of product, marketing and customer base - across gun-type.

It's a market that is over-ripe for consolidation within the vendor base where significant economies of scale in production, marketing, branding and dealer relationships could easily be enjoyed.

I suspect that such consolidation with investment in the production line was part of the plan but then something happened - Obama. So many guns were sold, so much money (profit) flowed that the impetus for investment probably waned as a result. At some point, the inevitable will happen, as it has in every other industry that reaches a certain point of maturity and escalation of production technology.

There are still major gaps in the industry product offering and execution, in reality however, the number of tiny custom gunsmiths who charge $4+k per product with little real reputation and marketing shouldn't be surviving if the market was efficient.
 
Re: Mystery Company Buying Up U.S. Gun Manufacturers

was personally researching cerberus acquisitions several years ago. not really news. still a little jacked up how conglomerates are sucking diversity right out of pretty much every industry. how many privately family owned and operated manufacturers are left? super corporations are being allowed to get way too big for their breeches.