Securities

  • June 15, 2026

    Chancery Cuts Claim Over FNF Chair's $50M Equity Award

    The Delaware Chancery Court has narrowed a stockholder derivative lawsuit challenging compensation decisions at Fidelity National Financial Inc., dismissing claims tied to a $50 million equity award for Chairman William P. Foley while allowing claims over directors' self-approved compensation packages to move forward.

  • June 15, 2026

    Glass Lewis Says Ky. Proxy Law Violates 1st Amendment

    Glass Lewis & Co. LLC has sued Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman in an attempt to block the enforcement of a newly enacted state law that the proxy advisory firm alleged is unconstitutional, following similar lawsuits over comparable laws in other states.

  • June 15, 2026

    Mich. Panel Upholds Stock Redemption Order

    A Michigan state appeals court has affirmed a trial court decision that resolved a decades-long shareholder dispute between a real estate development firm and its ex-CEO by ordering the company to buy out the former executive's original $25,000 investment plus 7% interest.

  • June 15, 2026

    GAO Urges FDIC To Rotate Examiners, Coordinate On Crypto

    A U.S. government watchdog said Monday that it's urging the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to redouble its efforts to adopt bank examiner rotation requirements and coordinate with other agencies on addressing blockchain risks.

  • June 15, 2026

    PE Giants Face Dem Scrutiny Over Data Center Investments

    U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren is seeking information from several major private equity firms about their involvement in artificial intelligence data center development and operations, saying the increasing number of data centers across the country is putting pressure on American families and driving up utility costs.

  • June 15, 2026

    FinCEN Says Banks May Exchange Fraud Alerts In 'Real Time'

    The U.S. Treasury Department's financial crime unit is moving to encourage greater industry collaboration against scams and fraud, issuing new guidance that clarifies banks can share real-time alerts and other, broader data with one another under a key liability safe harbor.

  • June 15, 2026

    Nano-X Investors Sue Over Korea Plant Restructuring Hit

    Medical imaging company Nano-X Imaging Ltd. faces a proposed investor class action alleging it failed to tell investors that it had expanded its manufacturing operations beyond what customer demand justified, ultimately leading to a $17.5 million write-down.

  • June 15, 2026

    Mylan Investor Claims Atty Fees Too Much For 'Lost' Case

    An attorney and stockholder in the former Mylan NV objected to the attorneys' fees in a proposed $60 million class action settlement, telling a Pennsylvania federal judge Monday that the plaintiffs' lawyers effectively "lost" a suit that began with allegations of $5.1 billion in lost share value.

  • June 15, 2026

    Wells Fargo, Ocwen Lose 2nd Circ. Rehearing In ERISA Suit

    The Second Circuit rejected a request for rehearing by Wells Fargo and Ocwen, which asked the court to reconsider its decision to revive a federal benefits lawsuit accusing them of mishandling home loans tied to union employee pension fund investments.

  • June 15, 2026

    Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court

    The Delaware Chancery Court this past week handled disputes involving shareholder voting rights, take-private transactions, merger disclosures, board control battles and investor litigation, while the Delaware Supreme Court heard arguments over the wind-down of an oil-and-gas investment fund.

  • June 15, 2026

    Judge Gives First OK To $69M ChemoCentryx Deal

    A California federal judge has given the first green light to a $69 million settlement reached between investors and ChemoCentryx, resolving claims that the California-based pharmaceutical company overstated the efficacy of its newly developed treatment for autoimmune disease ANCA vasculitis.

  • June 15, 2026

    Ex-SEC Atty Reprimanded Over Misstatements In Crypto Case

    A former U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission attorney has received a public reprimand for misleading a judge in a cryptocurrency fraud case that led to sanctions against the agency.

  • June 12, 2026

    Gensler Tells 6th Circ. 'Sports Bets Aren't Swaps'

    Former Wall Street regulator Gary Gensler told the appeals court overseeing Kalshi's prediction market battle with Ohio regulators that Congress didn't intend for the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission to become a nationwide sports betting regulator when it drafted swaps laws during his chairmanship of the agency.

  • June 12, 2026

    Robinhood Wins Final Approval Of $2M Order-Flow Deal

    A California federal judge granted final approval to a $2 million class settlement resolving claims that Robinhood affected how customers' orders on the trading platform were handled by failing to disclose financial interests.

  • June 12, 2026

    2nd Circ. Backs Bankman-Fried's 25-Year Fraud Conviction

    The Second Circuit on Friday upheld Sam Bankman-Fried's conviction and an $11 billion forfeiture order in an opinion that found the ex-CEO's claims that he could have made FTX customers whole didn't matter in the face of the government's "robust" evidence of his role in the fraud that felled the cryptocurrency exchange.

  • June 12, 2026

    AmTrust, Investors Ink $19M Deal In Restatements Suit

    Two classes of AmTrust investors have inked a $19 million deal with the insurance company in a suit alleging that AmTrust made a series of misstatements about its finances dating back to 2012, which required the insurer to restate its financials and ultimately sank the company's stock.

  • June 12, 2026

    Jane Street Used Tips To Dodge Losses, Terraform Says

    The administrator for bankrupt cryptocurrency company Terraform Labs has urged a New York federal court not to dismiss his suit against trading firm Jane Street over claims the firm used confidential information to profit from Terraform's collapse, arguing that it is liable as an insider and a tippee.

  • June 12, 2026

    CFTC Secures Trading Ban Against Celsius' Mashinsky

    A New York federal judge Friday signed off on a consent order that would resolve the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission's claims against Alexander Mashinsky, founder and former CEO of the now-defunct Celsius Network, and permanently bar him from trading commodities or running another commodity business.

  • June 12, 2026

    DC Judge Refuses To Wipe DOJ's Powell Subpoena Loss

    A D.C. federal judge has rejected a bid by federal prosecutors to erase their loss earlier this year in a now-closed fight over subpoenas tied to former Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, leaving in place a decision that had blocked those subpoenas as improper.

  • June 12, 2026

    Zoetis Brass Face Derivative Suit Over Pet Meds Statements

    Directors and officers of animal health company Zoetis Inc. have been hit with shareholder derivative claims that they breached their fiduciary duties by concealing that safety warnings about one of its products and increasing competition were hurting the company's bottom line.

  • June 12, 2026

    CFTC Sues New Mexico Over Prediction Market Enforcement

    The legal feud between federal and state regulators over sports-related prediction market offerings expanded Friday as New Mexico became the eighth state to be sued by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission for treating those contracts as illegal gambling.

  • June 12, 2026

    Insider Trading Defense May Draw On 'Varsity Blues' Playbook

    After enlisting a crew of experienced attorneys, defendants charged in an insider trading case allegedly involving deal information stolen from huge law firms are preparing to use a strategy that could take some cues from the "Varsity Blues" case in the same Boston courthouse.

  • June 12, 2026

    Former Pot Co. Execs And Wrigley Heir Settle Stock Fraud Suit

    A group of former executives for medical marijuana company Parallel and the heir to the Wrigley gum fortune have reached a settlement in principle to end claims that Wrigley lied about share prices to lure in executive talent.

  • June 12, 2026

    Taxation With Representation: Gibson Dunn, Davis Polk, S&C

    In this week's Taxation With Representation, SpaceX prices a $75 billion initial public offering at its designated price range, Apollo Global Management leads a capital commitment for a Broadcom initiative to build artificial intelligence infrastructure for companies including Anthropic, and pharma giant GSK acquires cancer therapy specialist Nuvalent.

  • June 12, 2026

    Trader Admits Fib To SEC, Avoids $600M Fraud Trial

    A former California investment executive told a Manhattan federal judge Friday that he lied to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, copping to a lesser count of obstruction after prosecutors initially charged him with a $600 million "cherry-picking" fraud.

Expert Analysis

  • GHG Endangerment Finding Repeal Brings New Legal Risks

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    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's 2009 determination that greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare anchored a matrix of regulation across multiple sectors — and the recent repeal of that finding has fundamentally destabilized the legal landscape governing industrial emissions, corporate liability and climate-related risk management, says Tanya Nesbitt at Thompson Hine.

  • 2 New SEC Proposals Represent Welcome Relief For Funds

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recent proposals to alter requirements under the names rule and Form N-PORT are favorable developments for registered funds due to lessened reporting burdens and added flexibility, and are illustrative of the market-facilitative regulatory posture under Chairman Paul Atkins' leadership, say attorneys at Debevoise.

  • Series

    Officiating Football Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Though they may seem to have little in common, officiating football has sharpened many of the same skills that define effective lawyering in management-side labor and employment: preparation, judgment, composure, credibility and ability to make difficult decisions in real time, says Josh Nadreau at Fisher Phillips.

  • Prediction Market Platform Probes Merit Strategic Responses

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    As the battle over the regulation of prediction markets is being waged between states and the federal government, investigations into insider trading allegations are increasingly originating from inside the exchanges themselves, creating obvious risks for market participants — as well as opportunities, say attorneys at Kobre & Kim.

  • Shifts At DOJ Alter Corporate Self-Disclosure Calculus

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    Though the Justice Department's new criminal enforcement policy clarifies the benefits of corporate self-disclosure, recent changes to prosecutorial priorities and resources mean that companies should reassess whether cooperation incentives still outweigh the risks of nondisclosure, says Hui Chen at CDE Advisors.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: How To Draft Pleadings

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    Most law school graduates step into their first jobs without ever having drafted a complaint, answer, motion or other type of pleading, but that gap can be closed by understanding the strategy embedded in every filing, writing with clarity and purpose, and seeking feedback at every step, says Eric Yakaitis at Haug Barron.

  • Tokenized Securities Have Capital Parity, But Details Matter

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    Recent guidance from the federal banking agencies clarifies that the use of distributed ledger technologies to issue and transact in securities will not affect the capital treatment of those instruments, but banks looking to apply parity treatment to tokenized securities should be prepared to document their qualification processes, say attorneys at Davis Polk.

  • Crypto Trading App Statement Advances SEC's New Direction

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    While the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's staff statement from last week carving out an exemption from broker-dealer registration for crypto-trading apps isn't a formal or permanent rule, it's the clearest signal yet of a quickly emerging coherent regulatory framework for digital assets, says Stephen Aschettino at Fox Rothschild.

  • E-Discovery Quarterly: Recent Rulings On ESI Control

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    Several recent federal court decisions have perpetuated a split over what constitutes “control” of electronically stored information — with judges divided on whether the standard should turn on a party's legal right or practical ability to obtain the information, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • Record Penalty Sets Stage For FinCEN Whistleblower Awards

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    The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network’s record $80 million penalty against Canaccord, together with the agency's recently proposed rule on whistleblower awards, signals an increasingly aggressive enforcement posture and illustrates the significant financial stakes associated with reporting violations, says Marlene Koury at Constantine Cannon.

  • Del. Ruling Shows Power Of Postclose Governance Provisions

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    After the Delaware Court of Chancery reinstated a target company's CEO as part of the equitable remedy in Fortis Advisors v. Krafton, deal parties should emphasize the importance of postclosing governance provisions to earnout economics, knowing that they will have to live with these provisions for the duration of the earnout period, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • 2nd Circ. Ruling Reinforces Securities Act Limits Post-Slack

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    The Second Circuit's recent decision to limit treatment of mandatory reverse splits as actionable sales in Knapp v. Barclays is narrow but important, offering issuers a stronger basis to challenge expansive Securities Act theories and reinforcing the post-Slack v. Pirani discipline of tracing, says Elisha Kobre at Sheppard.

  • A Data-Driven Guide For Navigating The 2026 Oil Price Shock

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    With the Iran war disrupting tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, oil price volatility has soared, and this extreme price dislocation is likely to generate complex legal disputes — but companies can protect themselves by preserving every scrap of market data available, say Peter Niculescu and Leslie Rahl at Capital Market Risk Advisors.

  • How Banks Can React To Risks In FinCEN Whistleblower Rule

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    Financial institutions should reassess and, if necessary, strengthen existing policies, procedures and other frameworks related to whistleblowers and internal reporting in light of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network's recent proposal to formalize a whistleblower award program, say attorneys at Arnold & Porter.

  • 2 Discovery Rulings Break With Heppner On AI Privilege Issue

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    While a New York federal court’s recent ruling in U.S. v. Heppner suggests that some litigants’ communications with AI tools are discoverable, two other recent federal court decisions demonstrate that such interactions generally qualify for work-product protection under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, says Joshua Dunn at Brown Rudnick.

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