Los Angeles Times

Comments by Overstock CEO trigger sell-off

Patrick Byrne said he was a part of 2016 election investigat­ion.

- By Jeran Wittenstei­n

The firm’s shares fall 36% after Patrick Byrne says he was a part of 2016 election investigat­ions.

Overstock.com Inc. shares fell for a third day Wednesday as investors reacted to statements by Chief Executive Patrick Byrne that he was a part of federal investigat­ions related to the 2016 election.

The e-commerce company has lost a third of its value in the two days since releasing a statement by Byrne titled “Overstock.com CEO Comments on Deep State” and referring to federal investigat­ors as “the Men in Black.” The stock fell 22.4% on Wednesday, bringing its slide to 36% since Monday, the biggest two-day slump in more than 11 years.

Byrne’s statement addressed stories published on a little-known news website and referenced investigat­ions relating to Bill and Hillary Clinton and Russian interferen­ce in the U.S. elections, political espionage and the rule of law.

“I will speak no more on the subject,” Byrne wrote in the statement. “Instead, having lived in places lacking Rule of Law and having witnessed the consequenc­es of its absence, I plan on sitting back and watching the United States Department of Justice re-establish Rule of Law in our country.”

The unusual comments are not the first to be uttered by the Overstock founder. He sued brokerages over claims tied to naked shortselli­ng in 2007 and has said the banks settled the case for tens of millions of dollars. He’s compared a company executive to a “Star Trek” character in announcing her promotion, and has signed communique­s to stockholde­rs with the words “your humble servant.” He likened Overstock’s cryptocurr­ency ambitions to Jonas Salk’s polio vaccine and joked on last week’s conference call about lending office space to the Securities and Exchange Commission amid an investigat­ion into the company’s tZero cryptocurr­ency push, comments which briefly sent the shares tumbling.

“What you have here is a highly controvers­ial CEO and another example of something that’s controvers­ial,” D.A. Davidson analyst Tom Forte said in an interview. He has a buy rating on the stock. “There are times like right now where that has a negative impact on the performanc­e of the stock.”

Overstock had been riding high after investors cheered the company’s second-quarter earnings report Thursday that revealed a narrower-than-expected loss before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortizati­on. The stock closed the week at the highest levels since October. Now, the two-day slide has erased more than a month of gains.

“The frustratin­g part is that the legacy home e-commerce business has returned to positive cash f low,” said Forte, one of two Wall Street analysts covering the company. “The two assets — e-commerce and blockchain — are incredibly well positioned.”

Representa­tives for Overstock didn’t respond to a voicemail message or email seeking comment Wednesday.

 ?? George Frey Associated Press ?? OVERSTOCK.COM Chief Executive Patrick Byrne, shown in 2010, is known for controvers­ial comments.
George Frey Associated Press OVERSTOCK.COM Chief Executive Patrick Byrne, shown in 2010, is known for controvers­ial comments.

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