Asset Management

  • January 06, 2026

    Financial Firm Seeks $5M From Rival That Lured Adviser

    Minnesota-based financial planning firm Wealth Enhancement Group LLC has asked a Connecticut Superior Court judge to issue a $5 million damages and costs verdict against a rival accused of hiring a WEG adviser and scheming to draw an alleged $27 million in assets under management into its coffers.

  • January 06, 2026

    5th Circ. Mulls If ERISA Claims Are Subject To Arbitration Clause

    A Fifth Circuit panel wanted a former employee at International Bancshares Corp. to explain how his benefits class action could evade an arbitration clause adopted by the plan that he never consented to, saying Tuesday that other courts seemingly have not adopted a theory that would allow that.

  • January 06, 2026

    Ropes-Advised Buyout Firm BV Beats Target With $2.5B Raise

    Boston-based private equity firm BV Investment Partners said Tuesday that it has closed its latest fund at $2.46 billion, exceeding an initial $2 billion target, with Ropes & Gray LLP advising.

  • January 06, 2026

    Ameritas Says Prior Deal Ends Couple's Annuity Fraud Suit

    A retired military officer and his wife cannot proceed with a suit over the sale of unsuitable equity indexed annuities, Ameritas and a former insurance agent said, urging a North Carolina federal court to enforce a settlement agreement and release that resulted from mediation.

  • January 06, 2026

    'Jersey Boys' Producer Slips $1M Pension Tab At 9th Circ.

    The Ninth Circuit on Tuesday reversed a win for a stagehands union pension plan in a dispute with a producer for the jukebox musical "Jersey Boys," saying an entertainment industry exemption to federal benefits law shielded the production company from approximately $1 million in withdrawal liability. 

  • January 06, 2026

    Live Nation Settles Workers' Claims Of Excessive 401(k) Fees

    Live Nation has agreed to a settlement of a proposed class action from former employees who alleged their 401(k) plan was saddled with excessive fees, after a California federal judge said in December he would reconsider his earlier decision requiring arbitration of some claims in the dispute. 

  • January 06, 2026

    German Waived Challenge To $4.6M SEC Tab, 1st Circ. Hints

    A German national's failure to formally respond to discovery requests probing whether he is subject to personal jurisdiction in the United States may have undermined his challenge to a $4.6 million default judgment in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission fraud case, a First Circuit panel suggested Tuesday.

  • January 06, 2026

    Willkie Adds DC, NY Funds Attys From K&L Gates, Sidley

    Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP has hired asset management partners in New York and Washington, D.C., who join the team from Sidley Austin LLP and K&L Gates LLP to continue advising clients on transactions and regulatory matters related to a range of investment funds.

  • January 06, 2026

    Latham-Led Howden To Buy US Broker Atlantic Group

    Global insurance broker Howden Group Holdings Ltd. has said that it has agreed to acquire Atlantic Global Risk LLC, a transaction liability insurance firm, as it aims to increase its presence in the U.S. market.

  • January 06, 2026

    Paul Hastings Adds Ex-Cravath Tax Pro To Growing M&A Team

    After adding 20 partners to its mergers and acquisitions platform over the past two years, Paul Hastings LLP announced on Tuesday that it has hired a former Cravath Swaine & Moore LLP partner who advises on the tax elements of mergers and acquisitions.

  • January 05, 2026

    PG&E Inks $100M Deal To Settle Investors' Wildfire Suit

    California utility Pacific Gas & Electric Co., its brass and its underwriters have reached a $100 million deal ending investor claims over allegedly misleading statements about the company's safety practices ahead of deadly wildfires in the past decade.

  • January 05, 2026

    Cancer Biotech Co. Eyes $182M IPO

    A company developing new drugs for treating cancer disclosed Monday it is looking to raise roughly $182 million in an initial public offering guided by Paul Hastings LLP and Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP, teeing it up for the first major IPO of 2026.

  • January 05, 2026

    Ex-Kellogg Worker Takes Tossed ERISA Suit To 6th Circ.

    A former Kellogg Co. employee has given notice that he plans to appeal to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals after a federal judge in Michigan tossed his potential class action alleging the food manufacturer lost millions in employee contributions due to excessive 401(k) bookkeeping fees.

  • January 05, 2026

    Call Center Co. ESOP Managers Ink $8.75M Settlement Deal

    A call center holding company's employee stock ownership plan managers, founders and other executives will fork over $8.75 million to end a dispute alleging the workers' ESOP was sold shares at an inflated price, according to the proposed deal filed in Pennsylvania federal court Monday.

  • January 05, 2026

    DOL Names Acting Benefits Official For EBSA Operations

    The U.S. Department of Labor has appointed a senior official to oversee program operations for the agency's employee benefits subdivision, according to a Monday update on the agency's online organization chart.

  • January 05, 2026

    Ind. House Bill Floats Transfer Tax On Real Estate Investment

    Indiana would establish a transfer tax on entities that manage funds pooled from investors in single-family residences under a bill introduced Monday in the state House of Representatives.

  • January 02, 2026

    CoinFund Co-Founder Alleges Secret Plot To Strip 25% Stake

    A co-founder of cryptocurrency investment firm CoinFund has sued the firm and several of its partners in Delaware Chancery Court, alleging that they orchestrated a covert scheme to strip him of a roughly 25% equity stake using undisclosed written consents, a non-pro rata distribution structure and what he calls a sham valuation designed to minimize his payout.

  • January 02, 2026

    5 Policy Areas Benefits Attys Should Keep Tabs On In 2026

    The new year promises policy shifts that could change the legal landscape for health and retirement benefits, including action to follow through on an executive order encouraging alternative assets in 401(k) plans, and a potential replacement for a Biden-era rule covering how retirement plan managers can factor environmental and social issues into their investment strategy. Here are five policy areas benefits attorneys will be watching in 2026.

  • January 02, 2026

    SEC Expected To Tackle Exec Comp, Private Investing In 2026

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is expected to hit the ground running this year on fulfilling Chairman Paul Atkins' agenda to lessen the regulatory burden on public and private companies alike, with the agency potentially gearing up to propose changes to everything from the reporting of C-suite pay packages to the accredited investor definition. 

  • January 02, 2026

    4 Compliance Trends To Watch In 2026

    Compliance professionals will be monitoring the risks brought on by the trade-related turmoil and deregulatory moves that have marked President Donald Trump's first year back in the White House, while new state regulations and artificial intelligence-related risks will also be top of mind.

  • January 02, 2026

    Megadeals, Tariff Reset Put M&A On Firmer Footing For 2026

    After a spring marked by tariff volatility tempered early year optimism for M&A, steadier valuations and a late-year run of megadeals across technology, healthcare, industrials and data infrastructure are creating rosier expectations for 2026.

  • January 02, 2026

    Benefits Attys Lock In On High Court As 2026 Gets Underway

    A withdrawal liability case set to be argued at the U.S. Supreme Court in January and a pair of high court petitions from Home Depot workers and Parker-Hannifin will be top of mind for Employee Retirement Income Security Act practitioners as the new year kicks off. Here's a look at those three cases.

  • January 01, 2026

    4 High Court Cases To Watch This Spring

    The U.S. Supreme Court justices will return from the winter holidays to tackle several constitutional disputes that range from who is entitled to birthright citizenship to whether transgender individuals are entitled to heightened levels of protection from discrimination. 

  • January 01, 2026

    Blue Slip Fight Looms Over Trump's 2026 Judicial Outlook

    In 2025, President Donald Trump put 20 district and six circuit judges on the federal bench. In the year ahead, a fight over home state senators' ability to block district court picks could make it more difficult for him to match that record.

  • January 01, 2026

    BigLaw Leaders Tackle Growth, AI, Remote Work In New Year

    Rapid business growth, cultural changes caused by remote work and generative AI are creating challenges and opportunities for law firm leaders going into the New Year. Here, seven top firm leaders share what’s running through their minds as they lie awake at night.

Expert Analysis

  • In NY, Long COVID (Tolling) Still Applies

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    A series of pandemic-era executive orders in New York tolling state statutes of limitations for 228 days mean that many causes of action that appear time-barred on their face may continue to apply, including in federal practice, for the foreseeable future, say attorneys at Sher Tremonte.

  • Navigating The SEC's Evolving Foreign Private Issuer Regime

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    As the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission reevaluates foreign private issuer eligibility, FPIs face not only incremental compliance costs but also a potential reshaping of listing strategies, capital access, enforcement exposure and global regulatory coordination, potential unintended effects that deserve further exploration, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • Opinion

    Expert Reports Can't Replace Facts In Securities Fraud Cases

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    The Ninth Circuit's 2023 decision in Nvidia v. Ohman Fonder — and the U.S. Supreme Court's punt on the case in 2024 — could invite the meritless securities litigation the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act was designed to prevent by substituting expert opinions for facts to substantiate complaint assertions, say attorneys at A&O Shearman.

  • Opinion

    High Court, Not A Single Justice, Should Decide On Recusal

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    As public trust in the U.S. Supreme Court continues to decline, the court should adopt a collegial framework in which all justices decide questions of recusal together — a reform that respects both judicial independence and due process for litigants, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.

  • What Cross-Border Task Force Says About SEC's Priorities

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    The formation of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's cross-border task force, focused on investigating U.S. federal securities law violations overseas, underscores Chairman Paul Atkins' prioritization of classic fraud schemes, particularly involving foreign entities, say attorneys at Cleary.

  • Series

    Traveling Solo Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Traveling by myself has taught me to assess risk, understand tone and stay calm in high-pressure situations, which are not only useful life skills, but the foundation of how I support my clients, says Lacey Gutierrez at Group Five Legal.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Client Service

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    Law school teaches you how to interpret the law, but it doesn't teach you some of the key ways to keeping clients satisfied, lessons that I've learned in the most unexpected of places: a book on how to be a butler, says Gregory Ramos at Armstrong Teasdale.

  • How Occasional Activists Have Reshaped Proxy Fights

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    The sophistication and breadth of first-time activist engagement continue to shape corporate governance and strategic outcomes, as evidenced across corporate annual meetings this summer, meaning advisers should anticipate continued innovation in tactics, increased regulatory complexity, and a persistent focus on board accountability, say attorneys at MoFo.

  • How Financial Cos. Can Prep As NYDFS Cyber Changes Loom

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    Financial institutions supervised by the New York State Department of Financial Services can prepare for two critical cybersecurity requirements relating to multifactor authentication and asset inventories, effective Nov. 1, by conducting gap analyses and allocating resources to high-risk assets, among other steps, say attorneys at Pillsbury.

  • Opinion

    Ending Quarterly Reporting Would Erode Investor Protection

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    President Donald Trump recently called for an end to the long-standing practice of corporate quarterly reporting, but doing so would reduce transparency, create information asymmetries, provide more opportunities for corporate fraud and risk increased stock price volatility, while not meaningfully increasing long-term investments, say attorneys at Bleichmar Fonti.

  • Series

    Adapting To Private Practice: 3 Tips On Finding The Right Job

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    After 23 years as a state and federal prosecutor, when I contemplated moving to a law firm, practicing solo or going in-house, I found there's a critical first step — deep self-reflection on what you truly want to do and where your strengths lie, says Rachael Jones at McKool Smith.

  • Series

    Painting Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Painting trains me to see both the fine detail and the whole composition at once, enabling me to identify friction points while keeping sight of a client's bigger vision, but the most significant lesson I've brought to my legal work has been the value of originality, says Jana Gouchev at Gouchev Law.

  • Opinion

    SEC Arbitration Shift Is At Odds With Fraud Deterrence

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recent statement allowing the use of mandatory arbitration by new publicly traded companies could result in higher legal costs, while removing the powerful deterrent impact of public lawsuits that have helped make the U.S. securities markets a model of transparency and fairness, say attorneys at Labaton Keller.

  • Protecting Sensitive Court Filings After Recent Cyber Breach

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    In the wake of a recent cyberattack on federal courts' Case Management/Electronic Case Files system, civil litigants should consider seeking enhanced protections for sensitive materials filed under seal to mitigate the risk of unauthorized exposure, say attorneys at Redgrave.

  • Despite Fraud Focus, SEC Still Targeting Technical Violations

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission under Chairman Paul Atkins has emphasized its back-to-basics strategy, focusing on identifying and combating fraud and manipulation, but at the same time, it has continued to pursue nonfraud-based actions targeting technical rule violations, a trend that will likely continue, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

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