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VRRM Class Action Summary |
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Company |
Verra Mobility Corporation (NASDAQ: VRRM) |
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Lead Plaintiff Deadline |
August 4, 2026 |
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Class Period |
February 24, 2026 – May 26, 2026 |
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Stock Drop |
May 27, 2026 – VRRM fell $9.23 (71%) to $3.85 |
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Lawsuit Type |
Securities Class Action |
A securities class action lawsuit has been filed against Verra Mobility Corporation (NASDAQ: VRRM) and two of its senior executives by plaintiff Ekim Otucu, represented by Levi & Korsinsky LLP, in the United States District Court for the District of Arizona. The lawsuit covers investors who purchased Verra Mobility common stock between February 24, 2026, and May 26, 2026. The complaint alleges that defendants made materially false and misleading statements regarding the Company's projected revenue outlook, the growth trajectory of its Commercial Services segment, and the stability of its relationships with major rental car company customers, while allegedly concealing that Verra’s Commercial Services outlook and full-year guidance depended on maintaining its Avis Budget Group relationship. When Verra disclosed on May 26, 2026, that it had received a termination notice from Avis Budget Group, VRRM stock collapsed from $13.08 to $3.85 per share, a decline of approximately 71%.
Verra Mobility Corporation provides smart mobility technology solutions in the United States, Australia, Europe, and Canada, operating through three segments: Commercial Services, Government Solutions, and Parking Solutions. Its Commercial Services segment, which accounted for approximately 45% of total revenue in 2025, offers automated toll and violations management, and title and registration solutions to rental car companies, fleet management companies, and other fleet owners.
February 24, 2026 – May 26, 2026
Investors who purchased or acquired Verra Mobility Corporation (VRRM) common stock during the Class Period may be entitled to seek recovery under the federal securities laws.
The complaint alleges that throughout the Class Period, Verra Mobility's senior leadership provided investors with an overwhelmingly positive picture of the Company's growth prospects, particularly in its Commercial Services segment, which generated approximately $436 million in revenue in 2025. Defendants repeatedly touted Verra's "long-standing relationships" with the three largest rental car agencies in the United States, including Avis Budget Group, Enterprise Mobility, and The Hertz Corporation, and issued full-year 2026 guidance projecting approximately 5% revenue growth to between $1.02 billion and $1.03 billion.
According to the complaint, on February 24, 2026, Defendant Roberts described Commercial Services as a "durable cash-generative business with clear competitive advantage" and stated that "the fundamentals of the business remain solid." At an investor conference on March 3, 2026, Roberts described Verra's track record with rental car companies as "pretty impeccable" and stated, "we would imagine" continuing to serve these customers when asked about contract renewal cadence. He also dismissed in-sourcing risk, saying he did not "think of in-sourcing as much of an issue" given the complexity of Verra's toll management operations. At the JPMorgan Industrial Conference on March 17, 2026, Defendant Conti similarly downplayed concerns that major rental car companies could replace Verra with in-house solutions, emphasizing the Company's deep integration with customers' operating systems and relationships spanning over a decade.
On May 6, 2026, defendants reaffirmed Verra's full-year 2026 guidance across all financial measures, with Defendant Roberts citing "a solid start to 2026" and strong momentum. The complaint alleges this was particularly misleading because, during the same earnings call, Roberts acknowledged that a "significant customer" representing over 10% of revenue was operating under a short-term contract extension, characterizing renewal discussions as "ongoing and constructive." The complaint alleges that these assurances created a false impression of confidence in a renewal outcome that defendants knew or recklessly disregarded was at serious risk. In reality, the complaint alleges, Verra's optimistic growth projections and full-year 2026 guidance were dependent on maintaining the Avis Budget Group relationship, and defendants minimized the genuine risk that major rental car companies could replace Verra's services with in-house alternatives or outsourced competitors.
After the market closed on May 26, 2026, Verra Mobility issued a press release announcing that it had received a termination notice from Avis Budget Group regarding its contract, effective September 2026. Defendant Roberts said the Company was “surprised and disappointed,” which the complaint characterizes as in direct contrast to defendants’ prior statements about renewal discussions and competitive positioning. Management simultaneously slashed its full-year 2026 financial outlook, reducing revenue guidance from $1.02 billion to $1.03 billion down to $985 million to $995 million, adjusted EBITDA from $405 million to $415 million down to $380 million to $385 million, and adjusted EPS from $1.32 to $1.38 down to $1.19 to $1.25.
Almost one week later, on June 1, 2026, Verra announced the sudden departure of Defendant Roberts as President and Chief Executive Officer, further suggesting, according to the complaint, that the Avis relationship was critical to both the Company's Commercial Services business and Roberts' continued leadership. Multiple securities analysts expressed shock at the disclosure. Deutsche Bank called the termination "entirely unexpected" and questioned "the entire moat and thesis" for Verra's high-margin Commercial Services segment. William Blair stated it was "under the impression that Verra's 20-year relationship, intellectual property, economies of scale, and scope of services would result in another successful renewal." UBS downgraded the stock and cut its price target by 83%.
The market reaction to Verra Mobility's disclosure was swift and severe. From a closing price of $13.08 per share on May 26, 2026, VRRM stock plummeted to $3.85 per share on May 27, 2026, representing a decline of approximately 71%, or $9.23 per share. Multiple analyst firms immediately downgraded the stock and slashed price targets: Baird dropped its target by 60%, UBS cut its target by 83% while downgrading to neutral, Deutsche Bank downgraded to hold, and William Blair downgraded to market perform. The breadth and severity of analyst reactions underscore the degree to which the market had relied on defendants' prior assurances regarding the stability of Verra's Commercial Services business and key customer relationships.
● Lead Plaintiff Deadline: August 4, 2026
● After the lead plaintiff deadline, the Court will consider any lead plaintiff motions.
● Defendants may file a motion to dismiss.
● If the case proceeds, the Court may later consider class certification.
Disclaimer: This shareholder alert is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney for personalized guidance. No specific outcomes are guaranteed.
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