Solaris Energy Infrastructure, Inc.

Case Overview
42 Days Left to Seek Lead Plaintiff
Lead Plaintiff Deadline: | Lead Plaintiff Deadline: 05/27/2025 |
Status: | Status: Investigating |
Company Name: | Company Name: Solaris Energy Infrastructure, Inc. |
Court: | Court: Southern District of Texas |
Case Number: | Case Number: 4:25cv01455 |
Class Period: | Class Period: 07/09/2024 - 03/17/2025 |
Ticker: | Ticker: SEI |
Related Attorneys: | Lead Attorneys: Thomas W. Elrod |
Related Practices: | Related Practices: Securities |
The law firm of Kirby McInerney LLP announces that a class action lawsuit has been filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas on behalf of those who acquired Solaris Energy Infrastructure, Inc. (“Solaris” or the “Company”) (NYSE:SEI) securities during the period from July 9, 2024, through March 17, 2025 (“the Class Period”). Investors have until May 27, 2025, to apply to the Court to be appointed as lead plaintiff in the lawsuit.
On July 9, 2024, Solaris announced that it has entered into an agreement to acquire Mobile Energy Rentals LLC (“MER”). Solaris described MER as a “premier provided of distributed power solutions serving the energy and commercial & industrial end-markets,” primarily engage in the leasing of “natural-gas powered mobile turbines.” Solaris completed the MER acquisition on September 11, 2024, in exchange for approximately $60 million in cash consideration, approximately 16.5 million in shares, and repayment of approximately $71 million in Mer’s debt (the “Acquisition”). Following the Acquisition, the Company rebranded MER as its “Power Solutions” segment.
On March 17, 2025, Morpheus Research published an investigative report alleging, among other things, that MER had been “a ~$2.5 million revenue equipment leasing business based out of a condo with zero employees, no turbines, and no track record in the mobile turbine rental industry.” The report revealed that one of MER’s co-owners, John Tuma (“Tuma”) was in fact, a “convicted felon’ for “environmental crimes and lying to the court on multiple occasions under oath” and was involved in a “$800 million gas turbine scandal…that included allegations of bid rigging [and] corruption.” Despite being “nothing more than a small, local switchgear rental business at the end of 2023” MER was “seemingly transformed throughout the first half of 2024 – just months before it was acquired by Solaris. The report then described how, in that period, MER had acquired substantially all of its turbines, primarily financed through the $71 million in debt that Solaris would later pay in the Acquisition. Contrary to Solaris’ claims that MER had a “contracted and diversified earnings stream[,]”, 96% of its Power Solutions revenue was derived from a single customer. On this news, the price of Solaris shares declined by $4.15 per share, or approximately 16%, from $24.61 per share from March 14, 2025, to close at $20.46 on March 17, 2025.
The complaint alleges that defendants, throughout the Class Period, failed to disclose that: (1) MER had little to no corporate history in the mobile turbine leasing space; (2) MER did not have a diversified earnings stream; (3) MER’s co-owner was a convicted felon associated with multiple allegations of turbine-related fraud; (4) as a result, Solaris overstated the commercial prospects posed by the Acquisition; and (5) Solaris inflated profitability metrics by failing to properly depreciate its turbines.
On July 9, 2024, Solaris announced that it has entered into an agreement to acquire Mobile Energy Rentals LLC (“MER”). Solaris described MER as a “premier provided of distributed power solutions serving the energy and commercial & industrial end-markets,” primarily engage in the leasing of “natural-gas powered mobile turbines.” Solaris completed the MER acquisition on September 11, 2024, in exchange for approximately $60 million in cash consideration, approximately 16.5 million in shares, and repayment of approximately $71 million in Mer’s debt (the “Acquisition”). Following the Acquisition, the Company rebranded MER as its “Power Solutions” segment.
On March 17, 2025, Morpheus Research published an investigative report alleging, among other things, that MER had been “a ~$2.5 million revenue equipment leasing business based out of a condo with zero employees, no turbines, and no track record in the mobile turbine rental industry.” The report revealed that one of MER’s co-owners, John Tuma (“Tuma”) was in fact, a “convicted felon’ for “environmental crimes and lying to the court on multiple occasions under oath” and was involved in a “$800 million gas turbine scandal…that included allegations of bid rigging [and] corruption.” Despite being “nothing more than a small, local switchgear rental business at the end of 2023” MER was “seemingly transformed throughout the first half of 2024 – just months before it was acquired by Solaris. The report then described how, in that period, MER had acquired substantially all of its turbines, primarily financed through the $71 million in debt that Solaris would later pay in the Acquisition. Contrary to Solaris’ claims that MER had a “contracted and diversified earnings stream[,]”, 96% of its Power Solutions revenue was derived from a single customer. On this news, the price of Solaris shares declined by $4.15 per share, or approximately 16%, from $24.61 per share from March 14, 2025, to close at $20.46 on March 17, 2025.
The complaint alleges that defendants, throughout the Class Period, failed to disclose that: (1) MER had little to no corporate history in the mobile turbine leasing space; (2) MER did not have a diversified earnings stream; (3) MER’s co-owner was a convicted felon associated with multiple allegations of turbine-related fraud; (4) as a result, Solaris overstated the commercial prospects posed by the Acquisition; and (5) Solaris inflated profitability metrics by failing to properly depreciate its turbines.