More than 70% of votes cast backed Toby Neugebauer's call for a special meeting at Fermi Inc. before he suspended the proxy campaign, after the presiding Texas Business Court judge recused himself an hour before a scheduled July 2 hearing.
"The recusal requires a new judge to get up to speed on the board's 70% supermajority bylaw change and discovery approvals, ensuring the timeline no longer supports running a true dual track process on the schedule Fermi requires to be successful," Neugebauer, co-founder and largest shareholder of the Nasdaq-listed company, said.
The judge had previously stated he had no conflict at the outset of the trial and had awarded Neugebauer expedited discovery last week. Fermi's top two law firms withdrew from the case before the recusal, compounding the procedural disruption. Neugebauer's call for a special meeting earned backing from proxy advisory firms Glass Lewis and Egan-Jones, as well as several high-profile institutional investors.
Neugebauer called on the court to urgently rule on the board's 70% supermajority voting power change, which he said casts a cloud over Fermi and the future of Texas corporate stewardship. He pledged to press forward with the judicial process to ensure governance transparency. The recusal requires a new judge to familiarize themselves with the case, including the bylaw change and the previously approved discovery orders.
The suspension creates uncertainty for Fermi's strategic process, including Project Matador, which Seeking Alpha this week called the "most valuable asset in the AI race." Neugebauer reaffirmed confidence in Fermi's ability to secure a tenant group, assuming it is the one he and his team were contracting upon his departure. He called on former colleagues to avoid outsourcing execution and instead embody the "original Fermi 2.0 mentality" he began last December, saying it will be required to execute strong tenant group agreements and partnerships on time and on budget.
The board's 70% supermajority bylaw change, if upheld, could entrench management against the will of majority shareholders who have demonstrated clear support for a special meeting. Neugebauer's suspension of the current proxy solicitation does not end the legal challenge — he said he will press forward with the judicial process. Investors will watch for the court's ruling on the bylaw change, which will determine whether the board can maintain its supermajority threshold against shareholder demands. The next hearing date has not yet been set pending the assignment of a new judge.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.