Shoe brand Skechers claims it had to escort Ye, known as Kanye West, from its corporate offices in Los Angeles after he showed up “unannounced and uninvited”.
The firm added it had “no intention” of working with the rapper and designer.
It comes after Adidas, the German sportswear giant, cut ties with Ye over anti-Semitic remarks he made on social media.
The BBC has contacted Ye’s representatives for comment.
In a statement Skechers said Ye had arrived at its offices with a party and was “engaged in unauthorised filming”.
The party were escorted from the building after a brief conversation, it said.
The brand said: “We condemn his recent divisive remarks and do not tolerate antisemitism or any other form of hate speech.”
It added: “We again stress that West showed up unannounced and uninvited.”
Ye, who has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, has been involved in a string of high profile spats with big brands in recent months and many have cut ties.
The scandals are likely to hit the rapper’s income and he has lost his position in Forbes magazine’s list of billionaires. The magazine estimates the loss of the Adidas partnership has cut his net worth from $1.5bn (£1.3bn) to $400m.
In the past few hours Ye took to Instagram to address the well-known entertainment talent agent Ari Emmanuel, who had called on firms to stop working with Ye over his anti-Semitic comments.
He wrote: “Ari Emmanuel I lost 2 billion dollars in one day and I’m still alive. This is love speech. I still love you. God still loves you The money is not who I am. The people is who I am.”
On Tuesday, Adidas’s ended its Yeezy brand collaboration with Ye saying it does “not tolerate antisemitism and any other sort of hate speech”.
His products will be pulled from sale with immediate effect, said Adidas. The collaboration was put under review last month after the rapper showed a “White Lives Matter” T-shirt design at Paris Fashion Week.
Days later, the rapper posted anti-Semitic comments on his Twitter account which led to his account being blocked. Ye responded to his suspension by re-joining Twitter and saying he would go “death con 3 On Jewish people”, earning him a second disbarment.
Cutting the partnership, which has been hugely successful, means Adidas will make a net loss of £217m in 2022, it said.
It has also been reported that a $15,000 a year Christian school opened by Ye earlier this year has temporarily closed its doors. In an email seen by The Times, the principal of Donda Academy in California said ”at the discretion of our founder, Donda Academy will close for the remainder of the 2022-2023 school year effective immediately”.
”THERE IS NO SCHOOL TOMORROW.”