FRMI COURT NOTICE: Fermi Inc. Sued for Securities Fraud After Stock Drops 33%, Investors Notified to Contact BFA Law by March 6 Deadline
New York, New York--(Newsfile Corp. - January 21, 2026) - Leading securities law firm Bleichmar Fonti & Auld LLP announces that a class action lawsuit has been filed against Fermi Inc. (NASDAQ: FRMI), certain of the Company's senior executives and directors, and underwriters of Fermi's Initial Public Offering after a significant stock drop resulting from potential violations of the federal securities laws.
If you invested in Fermi, you are encouraged to obtain additional information by visiting: https://www.bfalaw.com/cases/fermi-inc-class-action-lawsuit.
Investors have until March 6, 2026, to ask the Court to be appointed to lead the case. The complaint asserts securities fraud claims under Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 on behalf of investors in Fermi securities, as well as claims under Sections 11 and 15 of the Securities Act of 1933 on behalf of investors who purchased or acquired Fermi common stock pursuant and traceable to the Company's Initial Public Offering. The case is pending in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York and is captioned Lupia v. Fermi Inc., et al., No. 1:26-cv-00050.
Why is Fermi Being Sued for Violations of the Federal Securities Laws?
Fermi is an energy and AI infrastructure company that purportedly intends to build multiple, large scale nuclear reactors to support its own network of large, grid-independent data centers powered by nuclear and other energy to power AI companies. Fermi's first project is Project Matador, its flagship, first-of-its kind energy and AI infrastructure campus designed to provide dedicated power for AI workloads.
Fermi completed its IPO in October 2025. In the IPO Registration Statement, Fermi represented that it "entered into a letter of intent . . . with an investment grade-rated tenant (the 'First Tenant') to lease a portion of the Project Matador Site . . . for an initial lease term of twenty years." The Company also represented there was strong demand for Project Matador and that construction of the facility would be funded by "tenant payments" and "lease agreements." Following the IPO, Fermi announced that the First Tenant entered into an Advance in Aid of Construction Agreement, through which it would advance up to $150 million to Fermi to fund Project Matador construction costs.

