The Borneo Post

Small assault-style rifle firms thriving under activists’ radar

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BOSTON: A decade ago, Kentucky’s Anderson Manufactur­ing was a small machine shop that didn’t make firearms.

By 2016, it was making more rifles than Smith & Wesson, according to the latest available data from the US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF).

Anderson’s big seller: assaultsty­le rifles that cost up to US$ 2,100 and require no lubricatio­n.

Anderson says it made nearly 454,000 rifles that year, or about 57,000 more than Smith & Wesson.

Anderson is the leader among a cluster of small, private companies that are taking market share from America’s biggest gun makers.

They are doing so with catchy marketing or weapons that have, for example, more knockdown power for hunting wild pigs.

Some rifles made by companies such as Patriot Ordnance Factory and Daniel Defense fire larger .308caliber rounds instead of the .223caliber rounds more commonly used in AR-15s.

Another firm, Kel-Tec CNC Industries Inc, makes the hotselling Sub-2000 rifle – which folds up small enough to fit into a backpack.

It costs US$ 500 and fires popular 9mm handgun ammunition.

“It’s easy to conceal in some sort of bag that is not screaming, ‘Gun,’” said Cape Gun Works owner Toby Leary in Hyannis, Massachuse­tts.

“People like it for the discreetne­ss.” By contrast, America’s leading gun makers have struggled over the past two years, with the three biggest seeing their rifle market share slip to 44 per cent in 2016 from 57 per cent in 2011, according to ATF data.

Over the same period, a cluster of about 30 small companies combined for 51 per cent of overall rifle production, up from 37 per cent.

Top rifle maker Remington Outdoor Company emerged from bankruptcy in May.

Net firearms sales at Sturm Ruger & Company Inc fell 7 per cent during the nine-month period that ended Sept 30.

And American Outdoor Brands Corp, parent of Smith & Wesson, saw shipments of long guns, including rifles, fall 32 per cent in fiscal 2018, compared to the previous year.

Gun sales surged to historic highs during the Obama administra­tion amid fears of more restrictiv­e gun laws with a Democrat in the White House.

But since Republican Donald Trump became president gun sales have fallen.

The adjusted number of criminal background checks, a proxy for guns sales, fell 10 per cent in November from the year- ago period, according to the FBI.

The biggest three companies – Remington, Ruger and American Outdoor – did not comment for this report, nor did the smaller manufactur­ers Anderson, Patriot, Daniel and Kel-tec.

Smaller players largely have sidesteppe­d scrutiny about their products or their financing because activists have mostly focused on pressuring big retailers and gun makers with publicly traded stock or debt held by mutual funds.

Excluding the big three, there were 28 companies that made 10,000 or more rifles in 2016, up from 20 companies in 2011, according to ATF data.

“The number of manufactur­ers was shocking to me,” said Christophe­r Ailman, chief investment officer for the US$ 219 billion California State Teachers’ Retirement system, which this fall started a new effort to press gun makers and retailers on safety.

Surging sales of assaultsty­le rifles under the Obama administra­tion paved the way for smaller gun makers to enter the market.

Larger manufactur­ers have in recent years had trouble meeting a spike in demand for rifles like the semi-automatic AR-15, leaving room for Anderson and others, said Stefanie Zanders, chief operating officer of gun distributo­r Zanders Sporting Goods in Illinois.

“The ARs just took off, and some manufactur­ers couldn’t keep up,” she said in a telephone interview.

Overall, rifles accounted for 2.7 per cent of the weapons used on US murder victims in 2017, FBI data show.

But assault- style rifles are at the center of America’s gun-policy debate because they have been used in deadly mass shootings, including last year’s sniper attack that killed 58 at a Las Vegas music festival.

The shooter used weapons made by small and large companies when he fired more than 1,000 rounds into a crowded music festival.

Those included ones manufactur­ed by Daniel Defense, FN America LLC, LWRC Internatio­nal, Patriot Ordnance Factory and Sturm Ruger, according to a report from the Las Vegas Metropolit­an Police Department.

This year, lenders including Citigroup Inc and Bank of America Corp outlined new restrictio­ns on lending to gun makers and retailers after a gunman killed 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, with an assault-style rifle.

Also in the wake of that shooting, top fund firms BlackRock Inc and Vanguard Group backed a shareholde­r resolution calling for Sturm Ruger to report on the safety of its products.

But small gun makers have plenty of options for capital outside of public markets.

Smaller rifle makers get financing from community banks, credit unions and makers of metalcutti­ng machines, according to a Reuters analysis of firearms financial disclosure­s filed with more than a dozen secretarie­s of state.

“We’re not going to starve any of these companies of capital because there’s always someone” willing to lend gun makers money, said John Streur, chief executive of Calvert Research and Management.

The Calvert unit, part of Eaton Vance Corp, has pressed big retailers to restrict gun sales.

Windham Weaponry in Maine received an US$ 8 million revolving credit line and a US$ 3 million term loan last year from Bar Harbor Bank & Trust, according to local real estate records.

The company and the bank did not respond to requests for comment.

Anderson Manufactur­ing received financing in 2013 from The Bank of Kentucky as its rifle sales began to surge, according to financing reports filed with the Kentucky secretary of state.

The bank has since been acquired by North Carolina-based BB& T Corp, which did not respond to a request for comment.

At the Cape Gun Works in Massachuse­tts, owners Leary and Brendon Bricklin said they borrowed several million dollars from Wisconsin-based First Bank Financial Centre to create what is now a 20,000-square-foot building that includes a retail store and firing range.

They said area banks initially were reluctant to get involved with their firearms business.

But some have expressed new interest now that they are up and running.

“Nature abhors a vacuum,” Leary said.

Anderson and its smaller peers are winning customers with innovation and marketing messages that can be patriotic and provocativ­e.

“People buy their guns because they want to buy some personalit­y in it,” said Angela Register, coowner of Spike’s Tactical LLC of Apopka, Florida. Her company is known for its Crusader rifle and details like a safety setting marked ‘Full Libturd,’ an insult aimed at political liberals. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A detailed view of the trigger assembly, markings and finish of a fully assembled rifle using the 6.5 Creedmoor cartridge is seen at Spike’s Tactical LLC, a gunmaker in Apopka, Florida. — Reuters photos
A detailed view of the trigger assembly, markings and finish of a fully assembled rifle using the 6.5 Creedmoor cartridge is seen at Spike’s Tactical LLC, a gunmaker in Apopka, Florida. — Reuters photos
 ??  ?? Rodger Brown checks the alignment of a front sight post assembly with a laser sight, at Spike’s Tactical LLC, a gunmaker in Apopka, Florida.
Rodger Brown checks the alignment of a front sight post assembly with a laser sight, at Spike’s Tactical LLC, a gunmaker in Apopka, Florida.
 ??  ?? A detailed view of a cerakoted Spartan helmet completely built lower receiver at Spike’s Tactical LLC, a gunmaker in Apopka, Florida.
A detailed view of a cerakoted Spartan helmet completely built lower receiver at Spike’s Tactical LLC, a gunmaker in Apopka, Florida.

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