Halper Sadeh Probes First Foundation–FirstSun Merger, Urges Shareholders to Act
- Halper Sadeh LLC is investigating First Foundation's agreed sale to FirstSun and urges shareholders to act promptly.
- Proposed deal: First Foundation shareholders would receive 0.16083 shares of FirstSun per First Foundation share.
- Firm may seek higher consideration, added disclosures, or other relief, questioning the board's evaluation and disclosure adequacy.
First Foundation merger draws legal scrutiny from shareholder counsel
A New York law firm is probing First Foundation Inc.'s agreed sale to FirstSun Capital Bancorp and is urging affected shareholders to act promptly, saying there may be limited time to enforce their rights. Halper Sadeh LLC announces it is investigating whether the proposed deal — in which First Foundation shareholders would receive 0.16083 shares of FirstSun common stock for each First Foundation share — raises concerns under federal securities laws or amounts to breaches of fiduciary duty by the company’s board and advisors.
The firm signals it may seek a range of remedies on behalf of shareholders, including increased consideration, additional disclosures about the transaction, or other relief and benefits. Halper Sadeh frames its inquiry around whether the board adequately evaluated alternatives and whether shareholder disclosure is complete and accurate, standard issues in takeover litigation for bank holding companies and regional banks where merger terms can hinge on valuations, regulatory approvals and forward-looking financial projections.
Halper Sadeh says it will pursue actions on a contingent fee basis so clients are not responsible for out-of-pocket legal fees or expenses and encourages shareholders to contact its attorneys promptly. The firm underscores potential timing constraints for asserting claims and invites First Foundation investors to discuss their rights with lawyers Daniel Sadeh or Zachary Halper, indicating the investigation is active and ongoing.
Broader sweep targets multiple banking and energy deals
The firm's outreach is part of a wider slate of inquiries announced the same day that also targets other announced transactions, including Peakstone Realty Trust’s sale to Brookfield Asset Management, Coterra Energy’s proposed stock-for-stock acquisition by Devon Energy, and the merger of Northfield Bancorp with Columbia Financial. That broader list underscores Halper Sadeh’s focus on contested deal processes across real estate, energy and banking sectors.
Halper Sadeh describes itself as representing investors worldwide and says it has secured corporate reforms and recoveries for shareholders in previous matters. The firm provides a New York address at One World Trade Center and encourages shareholders to call (212) 763-0060 or email its attorneys to learn more and protect their rights.