Halper Sadeh Probes Saltchuk Acquisition of Great Lakes Dredge & Dock
- Halper Sadeh is investigating the proposed Saltchuk acquisition of Great Lakes Dredge & Dock for possible securities and fiduciary-duty issues.
- The firm may seek higher consideration, extra disclosures or structural changes to protect minority Great Lakes Dredge & Dock shareholders.
- Legal challenges could delay the sale and affect Great Lakes Dredge & Dock’s project delivery and regional dredging capacity.
Investor-law firm opens probe into Great Lakes dredging sale
Legal scrutiny targets Saltchuk acquisition of Great Lakes Dredge & Dock
Halper Sadeh LLC is investigating the proposed sale of Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Corporation to Saltchuk Resources, saying the transaction may raise federal securities and fiduciary-duty concerns that could limit competing bids and confer special benefits on insiders. The investor-rights firm, based in New York, says it is examining whether disclosures are complete and whether deal protections, change-of-control provisions or other terms unduly preclude superior offers for the marine contractor.
The firm signals it may press for increased consideration, additional disclosures or structural changes to protect minority investors, and indicates it will pursue litigation or negotiation where appropriate. That legal scrutiny comes as Great Lakes, one of the largest U.S. dredging and marine-construction contractors, operates critical contracts on coastal restoration, port maintenance and infrastructure projects. Any challenge that delays or modifies the transaction could have implications for ongoing project delivery, subcontractor relationships and regional dredging capacity.
Industry participants say heightened scrutiny of strategic transactions in the marine-services sector reflects broader attention to how buyouts are structured, particularly for companies with long-term public infrastructure contracts and environmental permitting obligations. A successful demand for supplemental disclosures or deal adjustments would aim to ensure that contract continuity, bonding and environmental-compliance commitments are preserved for clients and communities reliant on dredging services.
Halper Sadeh widens focus to other deals
The firm is simultaneously probing several other proposed transactions, including Tri Pointe Homes’ sale to Sumitomo Forestry, a merger involving Air Industries Group and Tenax Aerospace, and a planned exchange of Valaris shares for Transocean stock. Halper Sadeh says it may seek relief on behalf of shareholders across these deals, emphasizing a track record of recovering funds for investors.
Shareholder options and next steps
Halper Sadeh states it handles matters on a contingent-fee basis with no out-of-pocket legal fees or expenses for shareholders and invites affected investors to contact the firm to discuss their rights. The firm says it will evaluate whether proposed consideration is fair and whether conflicts of interest or deal protections unduly restrict alternatives, and pursue remedies where warranted.
