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Bank Of America Loan Calls Into Question Its Recent Weapons Pledge

RACHEL MARTIN, HOST:

Bank of America said last month it's going to stop doing business with companies that make, quote, "military-style firearms for civilian use." So critics are questioning why the bank is doing business with Remington Outdoor, which makes military-style guns. Charles Lane from member station WSHU reports.

CHARLES LANE, BYLINE: According to court documents, Bank of America will lend $43 million to Remington as part of a prepackaged, fast-track bankruptcy plan. The deal was inked sometime in late March, about the same time that Bank of America started discussing its new firearm policy. But...

SARAH FOSS: This deal had been in the works for some time, so it really wasn't something I think that they could have easily gotten out of.

LANE: Sarah Foss is a legal analyst for the research firm Debtwire. Remington was already in debt to Bank of America. This extra bankruptcy funding was a way to get the gun-maker back on its feet so Bank of America could avoid taking a loss on its original loan. Plus, there would have been other costs in backing out at the last minute.

FOSS: They would've subjected themselves to lawsuits. I think, perhaps, their reputation - this would have cost, I think, their shareholders quite a bit of money.

LANE: Bank of America declined to comment, other than to say that going forward, it will honor its pledge to stop providing financing for the manufacturer of assault-style weapons. Still, there are plenty of banks willing to lend to the gun industry, in part because most of the time, it makes money. Brian Rafn, a stock analyst for Morgan Dempsey Capital Management, says Remington's bankruptcy was an outlier.

BRIAN RAFN: If you look at Heckler & Koch or Sig Sauer or Glock or Sturm, Ruger, you know, they are highly profitable, and they manufacture and manage the company for the long-term strategic outlook.

LANE: While sales have dropped since Donald Trump's election, that's a small dip compared to the boom the industry has seen since 2001. Rafn says if a bank chooses not to do business around guns...

RAFN: It really has nothing to do with the manufacturing or the profitability of the industry.

LANE: Following the school shooting in Parkland, Fla., both Citibank and Bank of America said they would place restrictions on doing business with the gun industry. This ignited the fury of Republican lawmakers, who saw it as private companies taking taxpayer bailouts and then financially excluding perfectly legal businesses. Then Democrats came out and pushed banks from the other side, urging them to restrict certain types of gun sales. Bank lawyer Matthew Dyckman says it's a no-win situation.

MATTHEW DYCKMAN: Banks that take sides in a political issue, no matter how controversial, run the risk of alienating important constituencies, whether they be regulators, shareholders or customers.

LANE: There have been reports of regulators and lawmakers making thinly veiled threats of extra scrutiny on banks for taking a stand against guns. On the other side, New York's Department of Financial Services, which regulates several large institutions, has fined insurance companies for doing business with the NRA and has warned banks for doing the same.

DYCKMAN: Political winds change power in Washington, D.C., and the states change all the time. And I think it would be bad for the banking industry if it became a political pawn for politicians.

LANE: Dyckman says when politicians start picking the companies banks can do business with, there's no telling which industry will fall in or out of political favor. For NPR News, I'm Charles Lane.

(SOUNDBITE OF KIASMOS' "BLURRED") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

Charles is senior reporter focusing on special projects. He has won numerous awards including an IRE award, three SPJ Public Service Awards, a National Murrow, and he was a finalist for the Livingston Award for Young Journalists.

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