Marathon Patent Group: Bright Red Flags With This Newfangled ‘Blockchain’ Play


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Summary: Marathon Patent Group, Inc. (MARA)

  • Marathon recently announced an agreement for the acquisition of Global Bit Ventures Inc. that will leave prior common shareholders with just 19% of the company.
  • GBV was an entity set up only in August of this year and appears to have an undisclosed security interest with the former CFO, EVP and Secretary of Marathon.
  • Marathon has multiple concerning parallels to Riot Blockchain, which recently engineered a similarly dubious pivot to the “blockchain.”
  • BDO resigned as auditor November 27. Per the filing “the resignation of BDO was not recommended by the Company’s audit committee.”
  • We are urging strong caution to investors in Marathon regardless of one’s views on blockchain technology.

With “blockchain mania” in full swing, Marathon Patent Group Inc. (NASDAQ:MARA) has seemingly hitched itself to the blockchain wagon and rode the wave to nearly 5x returns in a matter of weeks. The company’s blockchain focus has come about through a series of rapid shifts that are eerily similar to the questionable moves we identified in our recent piece on Riot Blockchain (NASDAQ:RIOT).

In Marathon’s latest 10-Q filed on November 20th the company describes its business as being “to acquire patents and patent rights and to monetize the value of those assets to generate revenue and profit for the Company.”

Yet despite that stated business model, the company has seemingly abandoned much of its focus on patents and patent rights and instead shifted gears toward blockchain assets including cryptomining.

Global Bit Ventures Inc. (GBV) Acquisition Raises Questions

Rather than purchase cryptomining assets directly from manufacturers or suppliers, the company decided instead to purchase an entity that owned the cryptomining assets. On November 2, 2017, the company announced via press release that it had “entered into a definitive purchase agreement to acquire 100% ownership of Global Bit Ventures Inc. (“GBV”), a digital asset technology company that mines cryptocurrencies.”

The company has been scant with details on the transaction thus far. On a conference call following the announcement, the company detailed that the acquisition includes 1,000 Ethereum mining servers, though it failed to disclose the cost or value of the servers when asked by an investor. Another investor asked “How long has the company (GBV) been in existence?” The company declined to disclose this information as well, suggesting instead that they would wait until an S-4 was filed before disclosing.

We found the above non-disclosures to be troubling. The agreement with GBV stipulates that the company is to issue 126,674,557 shares of common stock in exchange for 100% of the shares of GBV, which represented roughly $188.7 million at the time of the announcement (and roughly $750 million at current share prices.) The Agreement And Plan of Merger filing by Marathon detailed the ownership of Company Shareholders (ie: GBV shareholders) at the closing of the transaction:

Immediately after the conversion of the Company Shares, the Company Preferred Shares and the conversion of the Company Debt, the Company Shareholders will own 81.0% of the Parent’s capital stock on a fully diluted basis at the time of Closing.

Consequently, the agreement and merger plan leaves current Marathon common shareholders with only 19% of Marathon on a fully diluted basis at the time of closing. Given the extremely high cost of the acquisition, we would have fully expected the company to answer basic questions about the value of the assets being acquired and details around the entity.

We decided to check the Nevada Secretary of State filings on GBV for ourselves and we found that the entity was established August 9, 2017, mere months before the transaction was announced.

We also found that one beneficiary of the transaction appears be none other than Marathon’s former CFO, EVP and Secretary, John Stetson. A Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) filing shows what appears to be a previously undisclosed security arrangement between HS Contrarian Investments LLC (“HS Contrarian”) and GBV. HS Contrarian is run by John Stetson, according to the firm’s website. Stetson’s previous roles at Marathon are described in SEC filings.A Uniform Commercial Code ((UCC)) filing shows what appears to be a previously undisclosed security arrangement between HS Contrarian Investments LLC (“HS Contrarian”) and GBV.

It’s unclear from the UCC filing what the amount of HS Contrarian’s interest is, but the filing notes that GBV had agreed not to grant a security interest in the named collateral to any other entity. Therefore, HS Contrarian’s interest appears to represent the highest seniority in GBV’s capital structure.

We have contacted Marathon’s investor relations and asked about the relationship between GBV and Stetson, and whether there was any public disclosure of the relationship. Should we receive a reply from the company we will update this accordingly.

Aside from the security interest between GBV and Stetson’s firm, we also noticed another interesting connection. GBV’s officer/director filings with the Nevada Secretary of State only listed one individual, Jesse Sutton. Sutton was the former CEO and co-founder of Majesco Entertainment, according to his Linkedin Profile. The Majesco entity morphed late last year into a company called PolarityTE through a reverse merger. Stetson is currently the CFO, EVP, and Director of PolarityTE (NASDAQ:COOL), highlighting that the interwoven business interests of Stetson and Sutton appear to have converged with GBV.

(On a related note, we wrote an article last week about PolarityTE and its public entity which has been reverse merged at least six times into a variety of different businesses and which we believe is replete with its own unique set of red flags.)

Alarming Parallels With Another Newfangled “Blockchain” Company, Riot Blockchain

On the subject of executive crossover, Marathon appears to have significant overlap in the individuals involved with Riot Blockchain, another public company that abruptly reinvented itself as a blockchain play. A recently amended S-3 filing for Riot shows that Stetson participated in common stock, convertible preferred stock, and warrant transactions with Riot (note that Riot has recently changed its name from Bioptix Inc. and that the amended S-3 filing still reflects the old company name). Aside from Stetson, the recently named CEO of Riot Blockchain, John O’Rourke, is to hold an approximate 41.04% stake in the common stock of Marathon per a November 29th prospectus amendment.

Aside from the links with key individuals, we noticed several other parallels with Riot. In our piece about Riot we described how Riot also decided to purchase an entity containing cryptomining equipment and how we believed it to be an irregular transaction. There is a rush towards the bitcoin revolution at the moment, and monitoring for fraudulent uses of the currency, or concerning acquisitions, is one of the ways the economy can self-regulate itself. When examining Riot’s transaction side by side with Marathon’s we identified the following:

  • Riot announced the purchase of its cryptomining entity on November 2nd, the exact same day that Marathon announced its own purchase of an entity containing cryptomining assets.
  • Both entities being acquired were incorporated in Nevada.
  • Both entities being acquired had short corporate histories.
  • Both deals were non-cash, dilutive stock transactions.
  • Both Riot and Marathon seemingly paid above-market rates to acquire entities containing cryptomining equipment that could have been purchased directly.

We find it concerning that these two separate companies both enacted dramatic pivots toward blockchain business models seemingly in lockstep and in such unusual fashion.

BDO Resigned As Auditor Just Weeks Ago

The company recently announced that BDO had resigned as its auditor near the end of November. Per an 8-K filing:

On November 27, 2017, the Company received notice from its independent registered public accounting firm, BDO USA, LLP (“BDO”), that it resigned as the Company’s auditor effective immediately. The resignation of BDO was not recommended by the Company’s audit committee nor was the audit committee’s approval required.

Per the same 8-K filing, on November 30, 2017, the board appointed RBSM LLP as the company’s independent registered public accounting firm. We checked the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) website and found the latest inspection report on RBSM. The report highlighted what appeared to be some significant deficiencies:

Certain deficiencies identified were of such significance that it appeared to the inspection team that the Firm, at the time it issued its audit report, had not obtained sufficient appropriate audit evidence to support its opinion that the financial statements were presented fairly, in all material respects, in accordance with the applicable financial reporting framework. In other words, in these audits, the auditor issued an opinion without satisfying its fundamental obligation to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements were free of material misstatement.

The report went on to detail individual failures relating to audit procedures on several of its issuer clients. In one instance it noted a “failure to perform sufficient procedures to test the existence, completeness, and valuation of assets acquired and liabilities assumed in business combinations.”

Given the unusual business combination with GBV as detailed above, we hope that RBSM has taken steps to ensure that going forward it follows audit procedures relating to business combinations (and in general).

Note that the PCAOB report also underscored that “the fact that one or more deficiencies in an audit reach this level of significance does not necessarily indicate that the financial statements are materially misstated” and that inspection teams are limited to information available from the auditor. Nonetheless, we view the resignation of BDO and the replacement with a lesser-known firm of questionable quality to be another reason to tread carefully.

Conclusion

We have no strong bearish or bullish view on the future of blockchain technology. We genuinely hope the technology is implemented broadly and that currency and information can be effectively decentralized through its use. Regardless of one’s views on blockchain technology however, we think Marathon is a name that investors should avoid. We urge cautious investing to all.

Disclosure: I am/we are short MARA, RIOT, COOL.

I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

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