Fintech

  • April 24, 2026

    CFTC Sues New York Over Sports Event Contract Crackdown

    The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission sued the state of New York Friday in its latest bid to assert "exclusive jurisdiction" over prediction markets and cut through the state's attempts to shut down certain event contract trading as unregistered gambling.

  • April 24, 2026

    Rakoff Tosses Securities Fraud Claims Against Coinbase

    U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff has tossed securities fraud claims against cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase brought by investors in a digital asset that tracked the native token of the now-failed Terraform blockchain ecosystem.

  • April 24, 2026

    Jane Street Slams Terraform's Insider Trading Claims

    Jane Street is looking to escape a lawsuit accusing it of trading on insider information ahead of the collapse of cryptocurrency company Terraform Labs, telling a New York federal judge that it shouldn't have to "foot the bill" for a fraud that Terraform itself committed.

  • April 24, 2026

    Wis. Takes On Prediction Market Cos. Over 'Illegal' Betting

    Wisconsin has joined the fight with other states to regulate prediction market platforms under their respective state gambling laws, telling a Wisconsin state court that the platforms are engaging in criminal activity and creating a public nuisance.

  • April 24, 2026

    Feds Lock In Cut To Community Bank Leverage Ratio

    Federal regulators on Thursday finalized a rule to relax a streamlined leverage capital requirement for community banks, a move they said will give hundreds more small banks a way to avoid more complex, risk-based capital standards.

  • April 24, 2026

    DOJ Ends Powell Probe, Clearing Way For Warsh Vote

    The U.S. Department of Justice said Friday that it is dropping its criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, a reversal that has cleared a path for the U.S. Senate to confirm President Donald Trump's pick to succeed him.

  • April 23, 2026

    Robinhood Investors Warn Of Nvidia Redux Before High Court

    Robinhood Markets Inc. investors urged the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday not to hear a dispute revolving around the trading platform's $2.1 billion initial public offering, arguing that the case the company presents is "in the same mold" as those that the justices threw out against Meta and Nvidia two years ago.

  • April 23, 2026

    BofA, EY Strike $2.5M Deal To Settle MOVEit Breach Claims

    Bank of America and EY have agreed to pay $2.5 million to nearly 200,000 people to settle claims in multidistrict litigation over the May 2023 breach of file transfer application MOVEit, according to a motion for settlement.

  • April 23, 2026

    Bitcoin Depot Data Breach Suit Can't Proceed, Judge Rules

    A Georgia federal judge freed Bitcoin Depot on Thursday from a proposed class action over a 2024 data breach that affected tens of thousands of customers after ruling that the speculative risk of identity theft on its own could not support the suit.

  • April 23, 2026

    Soldier Aware Of Maduro Raid Bet On Polymarket, Feds Say

    A U.S. Army sergeant stationed in North Carolina who helped plan the capture of deposed Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro made lucrative, unlawful prediction market bets on the raid that saw Maduro brought to New York in January, Manhattan federal prosecutors charged on Thursday.

  • April 23, 2026

    Crypto.com Joins Arizona Prediction Markets Brawl

    Crypto.com has entered the Arizona battleground over prediction markets, joining Kalshi and the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission in a consolidated civil suit against the state, seeking an order protecting its own sports contract offerings from the reach of Arizona gaming regulators.

  • April 23, 2026

    FDIC Sees Surging Growth In Bank Lending To Nonbanks

    The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said that bank loans to private equity, private credit and other nonbanks reached $1.4 trillion last year, identifying it as the fastest-growing category of lending for banks since the 2008 financial crisis.

  • April 23, 2026

    Robinhood Hit With Class Action Over Illegal Sports Betting

    A proposed class action California, Michigan, New Jersey and New York residents filed against Robinhood Markets Inc. accuses the company of deceptively running an unlicensed sports gambling operation and seeks to recover billions of dollars in lost wagers and damages.

  • April 22, 2026

    CFPB Curbs Fair Lending Oversight In Latest Reg Rollback

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has moved to curtail enforcement of a decades-old federal fair lending statute, finalizing a rule that consumer advocates are condemning as an evisceration of antidiscrimination oversight.

  • April 22, 2026

    Pal Of Ex-Beneficient CEO Aided Fraud Cover-Up, Jury Hears

    A childhood friend of the founder and former CEO of Dallas-based financial services firm Beneficient on Wednesday told a Manhattan federal jury that he fabricated email correspondence and signed documents misstating his time as head of what prosecutors say was a shell company used to pull off a $100 million fraud.

  • April 22, 2026

    Alston & Bird Says Goliath Investors Can't Claim Malpractice

    Alston & Bird LLP urged a Florida federal court on Wednesday to toss a malpractice suit claiming the firm facilitated a $328 million cryptocurrency scam at Goliath Ventures Inc., arguing that the proposed class of Goliath investors who brought the suit were never clients of the firm.

  • April 22, 2026

    Coinbase, Gemini Nudge NY 'Gambling' Cases To Fed. Court

    A day after being sued by the New York Attorney General's Office for allegedly running illegal gambling operations through sports and election event contract offerings, Coinbase and Gemini on Wednesday sent the cases to federal court, claiming their services are federally regulated by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission and not state gambling regulators.

  • April 22, 2026

    SBF Says He Wrote New Trial Bid Himself, But Asks To Pull It

    Imprisoned FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried has told a New York federal judge that, although his attorney parents made suggestions regarding his motion for a new trial, he wrote the brief himself, but now wants to withdraw the request, because he doesn't "believe I will get a fair hearing on this topic in front of you."

  • April 22, 2026

    TD Bank, Airline Data Co. Accused Of Sharing Info With Govt.

    TD Bank NA and airline-owned financial technology company Airlines Reporting Corp. are facing a proposed class action in Delaware federal court accusing them of funneling airfare transaction data to the government through a "secret pipeline," in violation of consumers' financial privacy rights.

  • April 22, 2026

    Illinois Judge Sends Kalshi Gambling Suit To New York

    An Illinois federal judge transferred a putative class action accusing Kalshi Inc. of violating Illinois gambling and consumer protection laws to New York, which has consolidated similar lawsuits claiming the platform falsely markets itself as a "prediction market," when it is actually running an illegal sports gambling operation.

  • April 22, 2026

    NY Gov. Bans State Officials Using Inside Info For Online Bets

    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul signed an executive order Wednesday blocking state officials from trading on prediction markets using insider information they obtained during the course of their official duties, citing recent reports of bets related to the U.S. military action within Venezuela and the war in Iran.

  • April 22, 2026

    Crypto Exec Sun Accuses Trump Family-Tied Firm Of Fraud

    Cryptocurrency entrepreneur Justin Sun is suing World Liberty Financial for fraud, claiming the Trump family-tied crypto firm's operators became "the new boogeyman behind the curtain" when they used backdoor mechanisms to hold Sun's tokens hostage after he invested $45 million in the project.

  • April 21, 2026

    Jury Told Ex-Finance CEO Is The Fall Guy In $100M Fraud Case

    Counsel for the founder of Beneficient on Tuesday told a Manhattan federal jury that the founder of the Dallas-based financial services firm did not defraud its onetime business partner GWG Holdings out of more than $100 million, saying a group of former insiders are trying to scapegoat the executive for GWG's downfall.

  • April 21, 2026

    US Lawmakers Float Path For Fintech Fed Accounts

    Two federal lawmakers from California introduced a bipartisan bill on Tuesday that would create a path for nonbank fintechs to directly access the Federal Reserve's payment rails in the hopes of reducing bank fees and delays for consumers using payment apps.

  • April 21, 2026

    Kalshi, Tribes Must Weigh In On Pause For 9th Circ. Ruling

    A California federal judge on Tuesday ordered Golden State indigenous groups, KalshiEx Inc. and Robinhood to explain why their fight over allegedly illegal gambling shouldn't be paused pending the Ninth Circuit's decision in a case determining whether Nevada can enforce state gambling laws against prediction markets.

Expert Analysis

  • Coinbase Ruling Outlines Litigation Committee Conflict Risks

    Author Photo

    The Delaware Court of Chancery's recent rejection in Grabski v. Andreessen of a special litigation committee's motion to terminate or settle — its first such decision in over a decade — over conflict concerns highlights why the independence of SLC counsel matters just as much as that of committee members, says Joel Fleming at Equity Litigation Group.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: What Cross-Selling Truly Takes

    Author Photo

    Early-career attorneys may struggle to introduce clients to practitioners in other specialties, but cross-selling becomes easier once they know why it’s vital to their first years of practice, which mistakes to avoid and how to anticipate clients' needs, say attorneys at Moses & Singer.

  • OCC Mortgage Escrow Rules Add Fuel To Preemption Debate

    Author Photo

    Two rules proposed in December by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which would preempt state laws requiring national banks to pay interest on mortgage escrow accounts, are a bold new federal gambit in the debate over how much authority Congress intended to hand state regulators under the Dodd-Frank Act, says Christian Hancock at Bradley Arant.

  • CFIUS Initiative May Smooth Way For Some Foreign Investors

    Author Photo

    A new program that will allow certain foreign investors to be prevetted and admitted to fast-track approval by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States will likely have tangible benefits for investors participating in competitive M&A, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • When Tokenized Real-World Assets Collide With Real World

    Author Photo

    The city of Detroit's ongoing case against Real Token, alleging building code and safety violations across over 400 Detroit residential properties, highlights the brave new world we face when real estate assets are tokenized via blockchain technology — and what happens to the human tenants caught in the middle, say Biying Cheng and Cornell law professor David Reiss.

  • Drafting Tech Patents After USPTO's Eligibility Memos

    Author Photo

    Two recent U.S. Patent and Trademark Office memos on subject matter eligibility declarations provide an evidentiary playbook for artificial intelligence and software patent applications, highlighting how targeted, stand‑alone SMEDs that present objective, claim‑anchored facts can improve patent application outcomes, say attorneys at Reed Smith.

  • How Lenders Can Be Ready For Disparate Impact Variabilities

    Author Photo

    Amid state attorneys general's and regulators' mixed messaging around disparate impact liability, financial institutions can take several steps to minimize risk, including ensuring compliance management aligns with current law and avoiding decisions that impede growth in business and service, says Elena Babinecz at Baker Donelson.

  • Series

    Judges On AI: Practical Use Cases In Chambers

    Author Photo

    U.S. Magistrate Judge Allison Goddard in the Southern District of California discusses how she uses generative artificial intelligence tools in chambers to make work more efficient and effective — from editing jury instructions for clarity to summarizing key documents.

  • A Closer Look At California Financial Regulator's 2026 Agenda

    Author Photo

    California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation Commissioner KC Mohseni in recent remarks demonstrated the regulator's growing importance amid the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's retreat by debuting expansive goals for 2026, including finalizing rulemaking for the state's digital asset law and expanding enforcement authority around consumer complaints, says John Kimble at Hinshaw.

  • Series

    Trail Running Makes Me A Better Lawyer

    Author Photo

    Navigating the muddy, root-filled path of trail marathons and ultramarathons provides fertile training ground for my high-stakes fractional general counsel work, teaching me to slow down my mind when the terrain shifts, sharpen my focus and trust my training, says Eric Proos at Next Era Legal.

  • How Securities Class Action Deals Fare After Prelim Approval

    Author Photo

    An analysis of Institutional Shareholder Services data from the last 10 years shows that preliminarily approved class action settlements are unlikely to be denied in the final-approval stage, while procedural delays are more common than withdrawal or termination, says Rahul Chhabra at Charles River Associates.

  • What Applicants Can Expect From Calif. Crypto License Law

    Author Photo

    With the July effective date for California's Digital Financial Assets Law fast approaching, now is a critical time for companies to prepare for licensure, application and coverage compliance ahead of this significant regulatory milestone that will reshape how digital asset businesses operate in California, say attorneys at MoFo.

  • Malpractice Claim Assignability Continues To Divide Courts

    Author Photo

    Recent decisions from courts across the country demonstrate how different jurisdictions balance competing policy interests in determining whether legal malpractice claims can be assigned, providing a framework to identify when and how to challenge any attempted assignment, says Christopher Blazejewski at Sherin & Lodgen.

  • What Clarity Act Delay Reveals About US Crypto Regulation

    Author Photo

    The Senate Banking Committee's decision to delay markup of the Clarity Act, which would establish a comprehensive federal framework for digital assets, illuminates the political and structural obstacles that shape U.S. crypto regulation, despite years of bipartisan calls for regulatory clarity, says David Zaslowsky at Baker McKenzie.

  • How Latest Nasdaq Proposals Stand To Raise Listings Quality

    Author Photo

    Nasdaq's recent proposals stand to heighten both quantitative and qualitative standards for issuers, which, if approved, may bring investors stronger market integrity and access but also raise the listings bar, say attorneys at Norton Rose.

Want to publish in Law360?


Submit an idea

Have a news tip?


Contact us here
Can't find the article you're looking for? Click here to search the Fintech archive.