Halper Sadeh Probes Two Harbors–UWM Merger Over Potential Insider Benefits and Disclosure Issues
- Halper Sadeh is investigating Two Harbors’ proposed sale to UWM for compliance with securities laws and fiduciary duties.
- Deal trades 1 Two Harbors share for 2.3328 UWM Class A shares; firm reviews structural fairness and disclosure adequacy.
- Halper Sadeh probes whether Two Harbors’ board met fiduciary duties and properly disclosed material deal information.
Investor-Litigation Scrutiny Targets Two Harbors-UWM Transaction
Halper Sadeh LLP is investigating Two Harbors Investment Corp.’s proposed sale to UWM Holdings Corp., examining whether the terms of the merger comply with federal securities laws and fiduciary duties to shareholders. The law firm flags that Two Harbors is slated to be acquired in a share-for-share transaction that would deliver 2.3328 shares of UWM Class A common stock for each Two Harbors share, and is reviewing whether that structure and the deal process disadvantage public investors or omit material information.
The firm expresses concern that insiders or certain counterparties may receive substantial financial benefits not available to ordinary shareholders, and that the merger agreement may include provisions that restrict superior competing offers or otherwise limit the market for bidders. Halper Sadeh says it is investigating the adequacy of disclosures provided to Two Harbors’ shareholders and whether the board fulfilled its fiduciary obligations in negotiating and approving the transaction, matters that have become focal points in governance scrutiny of mortgage real estate investment trusts (mREITs).
On behalf of potentially affected investors, Halper Sadeh indicates it may seek increased consideration, additional disclosures, or other relief through litigation or negotiation if it finds actionable issues. The inquiry highlights broader governance risks in the mREIT sector, where complex asset portfolios and takeover structures can raise conflicts between controlling parties, management and minority investors. The firm notes its representation would proceed on a contingent fee basis and that prior recoveries in other matters do not guarantee similar outcomes.
Parallel reviews of other announced deals
Halper Sadeh is simultaneously investigating several unrelated transactions, including MasterCraft Boat Holdings’ merger with Marine Products, Silicon Laboratories’ sale to Texas Instruments and Webster Financial’s agreed sale to Banco Santander, citing similar potential concerns about disclosure adequacy and insider benefits in those transactions.
Shareholders are invited to contact the firm for a free evaluation
The law firm invites affected shareholders to contact it at no cost to discuss rights and potential representation, noting that plaintiffs would not be responsible for out‑of‑pocket legal fees if the firm pursues claims on a contingent fee basis. Halper Sadeh states it represents investors worldwide and lists contact avenues for further information.