Forward Industries made an all-stock bid to acquire Brera Holdings’ 2.1M SOL stash. Brera rejected it. Here’s what happened.
Forward Industries made a bold move in the Solana space on June 1, 2026. The NASDAQ-listed company submitted a non-binding, all-stock proposal to acquire Brera Holdings PLC (SLMT).

Brera holds 2.1 million SOL, making it a significant target. Forward valued the offer at a 30.7% premium to SLMT’s recent trading price. Five days later, Brera’s board shut the door on the deal.
Forward offered SLMT shareholders 1.54 newly issued shares of FWDI common stock per SLMT share. That worked out to roughly $7.19 per share, based on SLMT’s volume-weighted average closing price over ten trading days ending June 1.
SolanaFloor broke the news on X, flagging Forward as Solana’s largest decentralized autonomous treasury (DAT). Forward framed the deal as a natural combination of two companies sharing a mission: growing SOL per share and supporting the Solana ecosystem.
The company also pointed to its backing from Galaxy Digital and Jump Crypto as signs of credibility. Forward argued it could deliver more liquidity and better capital structure than SLMT could manage independently.
The proposal, Forward noted, was announced without prior agreement from Brera’s board.
Brera’s board reviewed the proposal and rejected it on June 6, 2026. The board’s stated reason was direct: it did not consider the proposal to be in the best interests of the company. Forward publicly disagreed with that position.
In its press release, Forward said it believes the deal would benefit both SLMT shareholders and the broader Solana ecosystem. Forward expressed disappointment that Brera chose not to engage in any dialogue.
Forward also noted it remains open to further discussion. The company believes the combination would give SLMT shareholders continued exposure to Solana, through what it described as a more liquid vehicle.
Brera has not issued a detailed counter-statement beyond the rejection.
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Forward operates under the Irish Takeover Rules, which govern SLMT as an Irish-registered entity. Under Rule 2.6, Forward must take formal action by 5:00 pm New York Time on July 21, 2026.
By that deadline, Forward must either announce a firm intention to make an offer or officially walk away. Walking away would trigger Rule 2.8 restrictions, limiting Forward’s ability to revisit the bid.
Forward also reserved the right to adjust the offer terms under specific conditions. Those include SLMT declaring a dividend, a third party making a lower competing offer, or SLMT executing a Rule 9 whitewash transaction.
The clock is ticking, and the next move belongs to Forward Industries.
The post Forward Industries’ SOL Acquisition Bid Rejected by Brera Holdings: Here’s Why appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.


