Capital Markets

  • November 18, 2025

    Crypto Co. Founder Charged In $10M Laundering Scheme

    A cryptocurrency exchange business founder was indicted for his alleged role in a $10 million money laundering conspiracy involving ATMs that converted U.S. dollars to virtual currency, often enabling illegal activities.

  • November 18, 2025

    Kraken Valued At $20B In Latest Funding Round

    Crypto exchange Kraken announced Tuesday it raised $800 million in a funding round that garnered a $200 million investment from Citadel Securities, valuing the crypto exchange at $20 billion.

  • November 18, 2025

    OCC Clears Banks To Hold Crypto For Blockchain Fees

    Banks may hold digital assets required to pay crypto transaction fees and test new crypto platforms, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency confirmed in a Tuesday interpretive letter.

  • November 18, 2025

    11th Circ. Won't Revive Oil Contract Suit Against Siemens

    The Eleventh Circuit has upheld the dismissal of a Saudi company's business interference complaint against Siemens Energy Inc. because Siemens, as the owner of the company's joint venture partner, was not a stranger to the agreement.

  • November 18, 2025

    Feds Charge 6 More In Global Insider Trading Ring

    Six more people have been charged in what federal prosecutors say was a global insider trading network that netted tens of millions of dollars for its participants, the U.S. Attorney's Office in Massachusetts announced Tuesday.

  • November 18, 2025

    MVP: Morgan Lewis' Asa 'Geordie' Herald

    Asa "Geordie" Herald, partner in the structured transactions group at Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP, has helped lead a series of cutting-edge deals to securitize Small Business Administration loans worth hundreds of millions of dollars, among other accomplishments that helped earn him a spot as one of the 2025 Law360 Complex Financial Instruments MVPs.

  • November 17, 2025

    Crypto.com Asks 9th Circ. To Shield Event Contracts In Nev.

    Crypto.com is appealing to the Ninth Circuit a judge's decision to not restrain Nevada's gaming regulators from taking action against the company over its sports event contracts.

  • November 17, 2025

    Judge Pauses $3B Bond Enforcement Amid Citgo Auction

    A New York federal judge has paused enforcement of nearly $3 billion in defaulted Venezuelan-issued bonds until a winning bidder for the country's most important seizable asset — the parent company of the oil giant Citgo — is chosen in parallel proceedings in Delaware.

  • November 17, 2025

    Citi Investors Can't Have New Shot At Suit Over $400M Fine

    A New York federal judge has declined to revive a proposed securities fraud class action that accused Citigroup of concealing risk-management failures that led to a $400 million fine, ruling that investors' revamped complaint remains too thin to sustain the case.

  • November 17, 2025

    SEC To Review Compliance With New Data Breach Rule

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission announced Monday it will begin examining broker-dealers and investment advisers for compliance with a new rule requiring them to report data breaches to their customers.

  • November 17, 2025

    Ill. OKs Next Step For LevelField's Crypto-Focused Bank Bid

    LevelField Financial Inc. announced Monday that an Illinois regulator has given it the green light for the next step of its planned acquisition of Burling Bank, furthering its plan to launch an insured bank that offers crypto services with the help of its acquisition counsel Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP.

  • November 17, 2025

    Origin Materials Investors Seek First OK For $9M Deal

    Investors in sustainable materials maker Origin Materials Inc. have asked a California federal judge to grant the first green light to a $9 million deal in a class action that claims the company and its co-CEO failed to disclose a change in direction in the company's manufacturing plans and a delay in building a new plant.

  • November 17, 2025

    Disney Brass Fumbled Streaming Strategy, Investor Suit Says

    Walt Disney Co. leaders, including longtime CEO Bob Iger, are facing a proposed shareholder derivative action alleging they mismanaged the launch of the Disney+ streaming service then concealed that an aggressive push for subscriber growth was made "at the expense of overall profitability."

  • November 17, 2025

    WilmerHale Taps SEC's Former Investment Management Exec

    WilmerHale has hired a 24-year veteran of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, who most recently was director of the agency's Division of Investment Management, to lead the firm's investment management practice.

  • November 17, 2025

    Kirkland-Led Satellite Firm York Space Systems Files IPO

    Space and defense company York Space Systems on Monday filed plans to launch its initial public offering, a move that comes as the IPO pipeline is expected to gain more traction now that the historically long government shutdown has ended and U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission staff are back to work.

  • November 17, 2025

    MVP: Mayer Brown's Amanda Baker

    Mayer Brown LLP's Amanda Baker advised DailyPay as it completed a $200 million asset-backed securitization of a system that allows employers to provide access to pay outside the traditional two-week cycle, earning her a spot as one of the 2025 Law360 Complex Financial Instruments MVPs.

  • November 17, 2025

    Mobix Sues SPAC Backers Over Alleged $30M Funding Failure

    A California-based semiconductor-technology company has sued its former special purpose acquisition company sponsor, affiliated investment groups and their chief executive in the Delaware Chancery Court, accusing them of creating a scheme of false funding assurances that left the company undercapitalized when it entered the public markets in 2023.

  • November 17, 2025

    Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court

    The Delaware Chancery Court and Delaware Supreme Court last week had a dense slate of fiduciary duty battles, merger-process challenges, post-bankruptcy fights and a series of cases probing the limits of fraud pleading, credible-basis inspections and board-level disclosure duties.

  • November 17, 2025

    SEC Gives Cos. Freer Rein To Block Shareholder Proposals

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission announced Monday that it will not review most of the requests it gets from publicly traded companies hoping to exclude shareholder proposals from corporate ballots this proxy season, saying that it will not object to the exclusions due to time and resource constraints.

  • November 14, 2025

    Credit Suisse Bondholder Class Certified In Suit Over Collapse

    A New York federal judge has granted certification to a class of Credit Suisse bondholders and named Pomerantz LLP as class counsel in a securities fraud suit alleging the bank concealed the impact of quarterly losses and its inability to retain clients leading up to its takeover by UBS AG.

  • November 14, 2025

    Stanford Credit Union Says Pig Butchering Scam Suit Misfires

    Stanford Federal Credit Union has asked a federal judge to toss claims alleging it failed to reasonably investigate fraud allegations by a couple who claim they lost $600,000 in a so-called pig butchering investing scam, arguing the wire transfers are outside the Fair Credit Billing Act's scope.

  • November 14, 2025

    SEC Off-Channel Sweep Led To Recordkeeping Compliance

    Despite Chairman Paul Atkins' criticism of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's previous off-channel communications settlements, that Biden-era enforcement sweep has boosted firms' recordkeeping compliance efforts, and a lack of big-dollar penalties on the horizon hasn't erased the pressure to comply, experts say.

  • November 14, 2025

    Texas Judge Rejects Bid To Block Kenvue's $398M Dividend

    Texas can't stop the makers of Tylenol from marketing the drug as safe for children and pregnant women or halt a nearly $400 million payment to shareholders, a state court ruled on Friday, rejecting arguments by Attorney General Ken Paxton's motion.

  • November 14, 2025

    FirstEnergy Investors Ask Again For 6th Circ. Clarification

    A week after the Sixth Circuit declined to reconsider a ruling blocking FirstEnergy investors from accessing documents prepared by BigLaw firms investigating the company's $1 billion bribery scandal, investors have once again asked the court to clarify its decision, arguing that it is "premised on a clear error of fact."

  • November 14, 2025

    Texas Justices Wall Off Shareholder Claims Against 3rd Party

    The Texas Supreme Court found that individual shareholders have no right to bring direct claims against an outside party that has an agreement with the shareholders' company, saying Friday that they instead must file suit on behalf of the company they hold ownership in.

Expert Analysis

  • Expect DOJ To Repeat 4 Themes From 2024's FCPA Trials

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    As two upcoming Foreign Corrupt Practice Act trials approach, defense counsel should anticipate the U.S. Department of Justice to revive several of the same themes prosecutors leaned on in trials last year to motivate jurors to convict, and build counternarratives to neutralize these arguments, says James Koukios at MoFo.

  • Digital Asset Report Opens Doors For Banks, But Risks Linger

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    A recent report from a White House working group discussing digital asset market structure signals how banks may elect to expand into digital asset custody, trading and related services in the years ahead, but the road remains layered with challenges, say attorneys at Foley & Lardner.

  • Series

    Power To The Paralegals: How And Why Training Must Evolve

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    Empowering paralegals through new models of education that emphasize digital fluency, interdisciplinary collaboration and human-centered lawyering could help solve workforce challenges and the justice gap — if firms, educators and policymakers get on board, say Kristine Custodio Suero and Kelli Radnothy.

  • Series

    Playing Softball Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    My time on the softball field has taught me lessons that also apply to success in legal work — on effective preparation, flexibility, communication and teamwork, says Sarah Abrams at Baleen Specialty.

  • How Securities Test Nuances Affect State-Level Enforcement

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    Awareness of how different states use their securities investigation and enforcement powers, particularly their use of the risk capital test over the federal Howey test, is critical to navigating the complicated patchwork of securities laws going forward, especially as states look to fill perceived federal enforcement gaps, say attorneys at WilmerHale.

  • IPO Suit Reinforces Strict Section 11 Tracing Requirement

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    A California federal court's recent dismissal of an investor class action against Allbirds in connection with the company's initial public offering cites the U.S. Supreme Court's 2023 Slack v. Pirani decision, reinforcing the firm tracing requirement for Section 11 plaintiffs — even at the pleading stage, say attorneys at Paul Weiss.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Mastering Time Management

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    Law students typically have weeks or months to prepare for any given deadline, but the unpredictability of practicing in the real world means that lawyers must become time-management pros, ready to adapt to scheduling conflicts and unexpected assignments at any given moment, says David Thomas at Honigman.

  • How Hyperlinks Are Changing E-Discovery Responsibilities

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    A recent e-discovery dispute over hyperlinked data in Hubbard v. Crow shows how courts have increasingly broadened the definition of control to account for cloud-based evidence, and why organizations must rethink preservation practices to avoid spoliation risks, says Bree Murphy at Exterro.

  • Key Points From DOJ's New DeFi Enforcement Outline

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    Recent remarks by the U.S. Department of Justice's Criminal Division head Matthew Galeotti reveal several issues that the decentralized finance industry should address in order to minimize risk, including developers' role in evaluating protocols and the importance of illicit finance risk assessments, says Drew Rolle at Alston & Bird.

  • Atkins-Led SEC Continues Focus On Private Funds

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    Since the change in administration, there has overall been a more accommodative regulatory stance toward private funds, but a recent enforcement action suggests that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is not backing off from enforcement in the space completely, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • 9th Circ. Ruling Leaves SEC Gag Rule Open To Future Attacks

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    Though the Ninth Circuit's recent ruling in Powell v. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission leaves the SEC's no-admit, no-deny rule intact, it could provide some fodder for litigants who wish to criticize the commission's activities either before or after settling with the commission, says Jonathan Richman at Brown Rudnick.

  • Series

    Writing Musicals Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    My experiences with writing musicals and practicing law have shown that the building blocks for both endeavors are one and the same, because drama is necessary for the law to exist, says Addison O’Donnell at LOIS Law.

  • A Reminder Of The Limits Of The SEC's Crypto Thaw

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    As the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's regulatory thaw has opened up new possibilities for tokenization projects, the Ninth Circuit's recent decision in SEC v. Barry that certain fractional interests are investment contracts, and thus securities, illustrates that guardrails remain via the Howey test, say attorneys at Skadden.

  • Genius Act Poses Strategic Hurdles For Community Banks

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    ​​​​​​​The pace of change in digital asset policy, including the recent arrival of the Genius Act, suggests that strategic planning should be a near-term priority for community banks, with careful attention to customer relationships, regulatory developments and the local communities they serve, say attorneys at Jones Walker.

  • Series

    Adapting To Private Practice: From Va. AUSA To Mid-Law

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    Returning to the firm where I began my career after seven years as an assistant U.S. attorney in Virginia has been complex, nuanced and rewarding, and I’ve learned that the pursuit of justice remains the constant, even as the mindset and client change, says Kristin Johnson at Woods Rogers.

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