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Jefferies sued by investors over losses tied to First Brands collapse

By Thomson Reuters Feb 25, 2026 | 4:08 PM

NEW YORK, Feb 25 (Reuters) – Jefferies Financial Group has been sued by investors who said the financial services firm defrauded them into investing in a fund linked to ​First Brands, the now-bankrupt auto parts supplier.

According to a ‌complaint made public on Wednesday in a New York state court in Manhattan, Jefferies and its Point Bonita Capital trade finance fund falsely claimed to have had “cash dominion” over receivables it bought from First Brands, ‌while ​the parts supplier was engineering what ⁠federal prosecutors have called ⁠a multibillion-dollar fraud.

Eugenia II Investment Holdings and Eugenia III Investment Holdings, both based in the British Virgin Islands, said they invested $25 million in Point Bonita, and were blindsided upon ​learning that First Brands had control of their money while it was double-pledging collateral and manipulating invoices.

The plaintiffs said ⁠they could have invested their money ⁠elsewhere but for Jefferies’ fraud, negligence and breach ​of fiduciary duty.

They are seeking at least $18.4 million, representing the ​difference between the current value of their investment and ‌the amount they say they could have earned elsewhere.

“Jefferies unequivocally did not engage in fraud,” a Jefferies spokesman said in an email. “We will vigorously defend against these specious claims and ⁠expect to prevail on the merits.”

Bloomberg News reported the lawsuit earlier. Jefferies said in October that its Leucadia Asset Management unit, through ⁠Point Bonita, held ‌about $715 million of receivables linked to First ⁠Brands. Leucadia is also a defendant in Eugenia’s ​lawsuit.

First ‌Brands founder Patrick James and his brother ​Edward James, a ⁠former First Brands executive, were indicted last month in Manhattan on fraud and conspiracy charges over their company’s collapse. Patrick James was also charged with running a continuing financial crimes enterprise.

The brothers have pleaded not guilty.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New YorkEditing ​by Bill Berkrot)