Capital Markets

  • June 23, 2026

    Solmate Board Enriched Itself, Duped Shareholders, Suit Says

    The single largest outside shareholder of crypto treasury company Brera Holdings, which does business as Solmate Infrastructure, has filed suit against the company's board of directors, accusing them in New York state court of brokering "self enriching agreements" to the detriment of shareholders.

  • June 23, 2026

    Hedge Fund To Pay Avis $650M In Short-Swing Profit Fight

    Pentwater Capital Management has agreed to pay Avis Budget $650 million to resolve allegations that the Naples, Florida-based hedge fund violated the Securities Exchange Act's short-swing profits rule by quickly loading up on shares and cash swaps and then dumping shares at the height of a short squeeze.

  • June 23, 2026

    Feds' Capital Revamp Has A Dodd-Frank Problem, Critics Say

    Big banks are broadly pleased with a draft capital-rule overhaul that federal regulators project would deliver the biggest capital relief in a generation, but critics say it rests on shaky legal ground that the banking agencies have "astoundingly" ignored.

  • June 23, 2026

    KKR Unit Unveils Univ. Of Tennessee Mixed-Use Project

    Private equity firm Arctos Partners LP, a KKR unit, and its partners are working with the University of Tennessee, Knoxville on a mixed-use development that will include a private club, homes, a 24-story hotel and an entertainment area spanning 100,000 square feet, the companies announced Tuesday.

  • June 23, 2026

    SEC Urged To Adopt CAT To Fix Market Surveillance Tool

    The national stock exchanges that run a key market surveillance tool have told the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission there is "no realistic fallback" that could replace the tool as the SEC looks for ways to trim the tool's budget, but some are urging the agency to take over funding and ownership of the database known as the consolidated audit trail. 

  • June 23, 2026

    Stock Bought Too Late For Breakup Fee Suit, Judge Says

    A New York federal judge has dismissed an investor suit claiming that the top brass of the sponsor of a blank check company unfairly claimed a $29 million settlement despite missing a deadline to merge with another company, finding that the investor purchased shares after the breakup fee of the failed merger was disclosed.

  • June 23, 2026

    Circle Says It's Not Liable To Crypto Users For Drift Hack

    Circle Internet Group urged a Massachusetts federal court to toss a suit from crypto users accusing the stablecoin issuer of failing to act when $280 million in digital assets was drained from crypto project Drift Protocol in an April Fools' Day exploit, arguing that accusations of inaction are insufficient to support the claims.

  • June 23, 2026

    Voyager Investors Appeal Toss Of Mark Cuban Crypto Case

    Investors of collapsed cryptocurrency brokerage Voyager Digital on Tuesday told a Florida federal judge they are challenging his order dismissing their claims against Mark Cuban and the Dallas Mavericks and his ruling denying the transfer of the case to Texas.

  • June 23, 2026

    SEC Sends E-Delivery Proposal To White House

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission could soon put forth a proposal amending the rules for providing electronic statements to investors, following recent comments from SEC Chair Paul Atkins that changes to the opt-in model are "long overdue."

  • June 23, 2026

    Vimeo Owner Bending Spoons Launches Plans For $1.6B IPO

    Italian mobile app developer Bending Spoons has unveiled terms for an estimated $1.6 billion initial public offering steered by Latham & Watkins LLP and Milbank LLP.

  • June 23, 2026

    SEC Won't Revoke Cannabis Co. Share Trading

    Oregon-based cannabis cultivator Grown Rogue International Inc. will continue to be a publicly traded company after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission dismissed a revocation case against it, finding the company had caught up on years of late filings and stayed current.

  • June 23, 2026

    Clifford Chance Adds Ex-V&E Debt Finance Atty In Houston

    Clifford Chance LLP announced on Monday the hiring of a former Vinson & Elkins LLP attorney as a finance and derivatives partner in its Houston office.

  • June 22, 2026

    Traders Plead Guilty In NY To $1M Insider Trading Scheme

    Two traders involved in a multi-year insider trading scheme with a former Joseph Gunnar & Co. broker who used confidential information about upcoming secondary stock offerings to make over $1 million in illicit profits pled guilty Monday to securities fraud, according to the federal government.

  • June 22, 2026

    Penny Stock Trader Loses Bid For New 'Scalping' Trial

    A New York federal judge has rejected a penny stock trader's request for a new trial after he was found liable for a $2.5 million fraud scheme known as scalping, ruling that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had plenty of evidence backing its allegations.

  • June 22, 2026

    Cuomo To Lead OKX-NYSE Parent Crypto Joint Venture

    Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo will co-chair a joint venture between cryptocurrency exchange OKX and New York Stock Exchange parent Intercontinental Exchange, a partnership aimed at developing infrastructure for "tokenized and digitally native financial products," according to an announcement made Monday.

  • June 22, 2026

    Zymergen Investors Get First OK For $125M Settlement

    Former executives, underwriters and large investors of now-defunct biotechnology company Zymergen received initial approval on Monday of a $125 million deal to end claims that they misled shareholders ahead of the company's initial public offering by approving misstatements about Zymergen's commercial product pipeline.

  • June 22, 2026

    WaPo Wants Trump Media Sanctioned In $2.78B Suit

    The Washington Post is asking for sanctions against President Donald Trump's social media company for what the Post alleges were repeated discovery violations in Trump's $2.78 billion defamation suit against the newspaper.

  • June 22, 2026

    CFTC Seeks Input On Energy Perpetual Contracts, 24/7 Trading

    The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission is asking for public input on how it should address around-the-clock trading and perpetual contracts in the energy industry, asking how the industry developments could impact the price of commodities like crude oil.

  • June 22, 2026

    OCC Pitches Anti-Illicit Finance Rules For Stablecoin Issuers

    The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency issued a plan Monday to implement Bank Secrecy Act and sanctions compliance standards for stablecoin issuers, folding in a past plan from Treasury Department regulators and marking the latest regulatory proposal under the federal stablecoin framework known as the Genius Act.

  • June 22, 2026

    Bitcoin Miner Hut 8, Investors Ink $2.3M Merger Settlement

    A proposed class of investors in Hut 8 Corp. has reached a $2.3 million settlement with the bitcoin miner to resolve claims that it overpaid for a company with severe operational issues and misled investors about energy and connectivity failures at a Texas facility that was part of the merger.

  • June 22, 2026

    SEC Signals Interest In Novel ETF Rulemaking

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission could soon ask the public what it thinks about new types of exchange-traded funds that some companies have proposed, potentially moving a step closer to writing rules for the fund industry as prediction market ETFs await the agency's approval.

  • June 22, 2026

    3 IPOs Could Raise $791M Combined As Listings Surge

    Three companies spanning the broadband infrastructure, silver mining and e-scooter industries launched plans Monday for initial public offerings that could raise a combined $791 million if they price as planned during the week of June 29.

  • June 22, 2026

    Coffee Chain's New Openings Guzzled Revenue, Investor Says

    Arizona-based coffee chain Black Rock Coffee, its executives and initial public offering underwriters were hit with a proposed shareholder class action alleging they failed to disclose ahead of the offering that the company's rapid expansion was negatively impacting sales at existing stores.

  • June 22, 2026

    Owners Of NHL's Red Wings, Maple Leafs Partner With PWHL

    Groups led by the owners of the NHL's Detroit Red Wings and Toronto Maple Leafs have made a substantial investment in the Professional Women's Hockey League, the first outside investment since its 2024 inception, the league announced on Monday.

  • June 22, 2026

    Mortgage Cos. Can't Slip Antitrust Suit, Homeowners Say

    A proposed class of homeowners urged a Tennessee federal court not to allow a group of mortgage lenders and software companies to dodge their antitrust claims, saying their suit sufficiently alleged that the defendants are engaging in price fixing for residential mortgages.

Expert Analysis

  • Justices' ICA Ruling Provides Certainty For Regulated Funds

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's recent ruling in FS Credit v. Saba that a contract-rescission provision of the Investment Company Act does not provide investors with a private right of action is a victory for the regulated fund industry, emphasizing that where Congress intended to create private remedies, it did so expressly, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • AI Heightens Old Compliance Risks For Investment Advisers

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    Though artificial intelligence offers genuine promise for investment advisers, it also magnifies long-standing risks — including those involving fiduciary duties, books and records, client confidentiality, and marketing — with most foundational compliance requirements likely to remain, says Theodore Edwards at Troutman.

  • Drawing A Line Between Settlement Pressure And Extortion

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    U.S. v. Luo, pending in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, may force courts to address anew when settlement negotiations become criminal extortion, particularly in the age of easily fabricated digital evidence, says attorney Denis Kiely.

  • Recent Cases Clarify When Risk Disclosures Trigger Liability

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    Several recent decisions highlight circumstances where risk disclosures can constitute actionable misrepresentations, providing clarity on how the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act's safe harbor and the common-law bespeaks caution doctrine apply to risk disclosures, and how publicly traded companies can guard against such claims, say attorneys at Katten.

  • Securities Class Cert., 5 Years After Goldman Ruling

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's 2021 decision in Goldman Sachs Group v. Arkansas Teacher Retirement System has not only armed defendants in securities cases with more arguments in individual class certification fights, but may also be providing greater certainty and finality in class certification battles, say attorneys at Skadden.

  • Series

    Founding An Autism Academy Made Me A Better Lawyer

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    Starting a nonprofit autism school with no building, no funding model and no guarantee that families would trust us taught me the importance of mission, patience and purpose — lessons that sharpened my practice and showed how meaningful work outside the office can make lawyers better, says Phillip Russell at Ogletree Deakins.

  • Opinion

    Rule Of Law Requires Gov't Engagement With Bar, Not Retreat

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    A federal agency's absence from national and local bar conferences, most recently illustrated by the U.S. Department of Justice's withdrawal from a New York City Bar Association white collar conference, disserves the bar, the government lawyers themselves and, ultimately, the administration of justice, says Muhammad Faridi at Linklaters.

  • How Nasdaq's 23/5 Rule Will Alter Public Offering Strategies

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recent approval of Nasdaq's proposal to extend trading hours to 23 hours a day, five days a week, may reshape how certain public offerings are executed, particularly for confidentially marketed public offerings, say attorneys at Faegre Drinker.

  • The Paradoxical Duty To Adopt AI When You Can't Bill For It

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    Both billing for hours saved using artificial intelligence and preserving billable time by not adopting AI may violate rules of professional conduct, but until bar associations' ethics rules catch up to this emerging economic dilemma, firms must decide how to adjust fee structures themselves, says Ines Lassalle at Peyrot & Associates.

  • Sripetch May Prove To Be An Empty Victory For The SEC

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision in Sripetch v. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission held that the SEC need not prove pecuniary harm for disgorgement, but if the commission must still identify victims and distribute funds in a compensatory way, it faces the same economic problem as before the ruling, says Erin Smith at Compass Lexecon.

  • Mapping 5 Fronts Of The Prediction Markets Regulatory Battle

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    The legal framework governing prediction markets is under simultaneous challenge in five independent areas, and the outcomes will determine not just who can operate prediction markets, but the compliance obligations of every participant in the ecosystem, says Ivor Wolk at Manatt.

  • How A Founder's AI Pitch Deck Can Become A Crime Scene

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    As recent indictments and prosecutions against tech executives illustrate, AI washing is a criminal enforcement priority, not a regulatory formality, highlighting the importance of ensuring that founders don't overstate what their artificial intelligence does, particularly in the initial pitch deck to investors, says attorney Alan N. Walter.

  • SEC Disgorged Fund Distribution Is Next Query After Sripetch

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    Following the Supreme Court's Sripetch v. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission decision, investor harm isn't required for the SEC to obtain a disgorgement award, but future cases must resolve whether the commission will be freed from a requirement to distribute disgorged funds to the victims of alleged misconduct, says Daniel Walfish at Katsky Korins.

  • Series

    Cow Horse Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Moving an unwilling 800-pound cow while riding a horse at high speed is exhilarating, a little unhinged and, at least for me, a surprisingly effective training ground for litigation — both demand focus, preparation over rigid planning and the willingness to act despite fear, says Ashley Zitrin at Glenn Agre.

  • O Brother, Where Art DAO? Jurisdiction Issues Abound

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    While there is a dearth of decisions examining a decentralized autonomous organization's citizenship for diversity jurisdiction purposes, Second Circuit case law has defined citizenship for other unincorporated entities, which may guide how courts evaluate an increasing number of cases involving DAOs, says Michael Mix at Morrison Cohen.

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