Shareholder Firm Probes First Foundation–FirstSun Merger Over Disclosure, Fiduciary Concerns
- • Halper Sadeh is investigating First Foundation’s agreed sale to FirstSun — 0.16083 FirstSun share per First Foundation share. • Firm is reviewing potential securities-law violations or fiduciary breaches by First Foundation’s board or advisors. • Inquiry could prompt litigation, supplemental disclosures, higher consideration demands, or delays before the deal closes.
Shareholder law firm probes First Foundation sale to FirstSun
A New York-based shareholder litigation firm is investigating First Foundation Inc.'s agreement to be acquired by FirstSun Capital Bancorp, putting legal scrutiny on the transaction's process and disclosures. Halper Sadeh LLC says it is reviewing whether the merger, structured as an exchange of 0.16083 share of FirstSun common stock for each First Foundation share, involves violations of federal securities laws or breaches of fiduciary duty by First Foundation's board or advisors. The firm urges First Foundation shareholders to contact it promptly, saying there may be limited time to enforce legal rights.
Halper Sadeh indicates potential remedies could include seeking increased consideration for First Foundation shareholders, demanding additional disclosures and information about the transaction, or pursuing other relief. The firm says it handles actions on a contingent fee basis, so clients do not incur out-of-pocket legal fees, and it frames the inquiry as part of its broader practice of representing investors in M&A-related disputes. The announcement emphasizes shareholder protections and the need for full disclosure of material facts that informed the board's recommendation.
The inquiry raises the prospect of litigation or formal shareholder demands that could force supplemental disclosures or negotiation adjustments before the deal closes. In bank mergers, such legal challenges commonly focus on valuation processes, conflicts of interest, advisor engagement, and whether the board fulfilled its duty of care and loyalty. Any complaint or motion by shareholders could extend the timetable for regulatory filings and review, and could spur additional scrutiny of the transaction record or fairness assessments.
Halper Sadeh is simultaneously investigating several other corporate transactions
The firm names other recent targets of its investigations, including Peakstone Realty Trust's sale to Brookfield Asset Management, Coterra Energy's merger with Devon Energy, and the Northfield Bancorp–Columbia Financial merger. Those parallel reviews underscore a broader pattern of post-announcement litigation risk across industries, as shareholders evaluate whether deal teams provided complete information and adequate consideration.
Industry context: consolidation and shareholder scrutiny in regional banking
The First Foundation inquiry comes amid ongoing consolidation in the regional banking sector, where mergers frequently attract closer examination from investors and advisers. As banks combine to achieve scale and regulatory efficiency, boards face heightened obligations to document process rigor and disclosure, and potential litigation remains a common mechanism for shareholders to press for clarity or enhanced deal terms.
