Securities

  • December 02, 2025

    Banking Regulators Pledge Basel Reset Amid Capital Rethink

    Federal banking regulators told House lawmakers Tuesday that they are committed to advancing a fully rebuilt Basel III endgame rule that won't disrupt bank lending or gold-plate its requirements, although they stopped short of promising a capital-neutral result.

  • December 02, 2025

    DeFi Treasury Co. Faces Investors' Crypto Competition Suit

    An investment firm is bringing a proposed securities class action accusing DeFi Technologies Inc. of misleading them and others about the extent of competition the crypto treasury company faced and other factors that allegedly negatively impacted its stock price.

  • December 02, 2025

    Vanguard Investors' Attys Seek $8.3M Fee

    Attorneys representing investors that settled with Vanguard for $25 million to end claims the company improperly triggered an asset sell-off that damaged investors asked a Pennsylvania federal court on Tuesday to award them $8.3 million in fees in addition to other expenses.

  • December 02, 2025

    Elliott Says Millions Lost To Oil And Gas Venture Overcharges

    Elliott Investment Management LP has accused SRP Capital Advisors LLC and a principal of misappropriating "tens of millions" from Elliott and other investors in an alleged scheme that began to emerge after a books and records suit in Delaware's Court of Chancery earlier this year.

  • December 02, 2025

    FDIC Secures Dismissal Of SVB Cayman Deposit Suit

    A California federal judge has permanently tossed a suit against the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. brought by liquidators of the Cayman Islands branch of collapsed Silicon Valley Bank, finding they lack standing to sue the agency and are barred from relitigating issues already decided in bankruptcy court.

  • December 02, 2025

    Wells Fargo Beneficiary's Hidden Trust Claims Are Too Late

    Wells Fargo has beaten claims that it intentionally concealed a Massachusetts man's trust fund and drove him to financial instability, after a federal judge found the man didn't take appropriate steps to find his trust decades earlier.

  • December 02, 2025

    Citadel Securities Can't Duck Microchip Patent Claims

    An Illinois federal judge has denied Citadel Securities' attempt to escape a software company's patent infringement claims related to computer microchips, saying she was not convinced that the patents at issue were too abstract to be valid.

  • December 02, 2025

    Three Arrows Boosts $1.5B FTX Claim Tied To Crypto Winter

    The liquidators of defunct crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital defended their $1.53 billion claim against FTX months after the failed exchange called it "baseless," telling a Delaware bankruptcy judge that its assets at FTX were sold just weeks before its collapse in what amounts to "classic preference."

  • December 02, 2025

    FAT Brands Sued In Del. For Docs On Spinoff, Other Moves

    A stockholder of the FAT Brands Inc. global restaurant family sued for corporate books and records in Delaware's Court of Chancery Monday, pointing to allegedly suspicious transactions and purported debt pressures, and citing what was described as a history of purported "economic malfeasance" by FAT's management.

  • December 02, 2025

    Twitter Investors Lose Bid To DQ Musk Counsel Spiro

    A California federal judge has denied an attempt by Twitter investors to have Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP partner Alex Spiro disqualified from serving as both lead counsel for Elon Musk and a witness in a trial over claims that Musk tried to tank Twitter's stock.

  • December 02, 2025

    Crypto-Focused Forward Industries Taps Fintech Vet As GC

    Solana treasury company Forward Industries Inc. has tapped the former chief legal officer of digital broker-dealer Securitize Inc. and top lawyer at crypto-focused Anchorage Digital to serve as its general counsel.

  • December 02, 2025

    SEC's Atkins Pushes To Broaden Small Business Criteria

    U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul Atkins said on Tuesday that the agency should push to change the definition of small business so that more publicly traded companies can forgo what he considers to be burdensome regulatory requirements.

  • December 02, 2025

    FINRA Says Firm Broke Reg BI With Private Placement Sales

    A Manhattan brokerage faces Financial Industry Regulatory Authority claims that it recommended $24 million in investments without a reasonable basis to believe they were in the best interest of its clients, while the firm's CEO was accused of pocketing undisclosed markups and its chief compliance officer allegedly failed to conduct due diligence on the offerings.

  • December 02, 2025

    Approach The Bench: Judge Robart On Living Under Threats

    It's been nearly nine years since U.S. District Judge James Robart blocked President Donald Trump's 2017 executive order barring travel from seven Muslim-majority countries, and though the judge has had a long career — including groundbreaking patent and securities decisions — he still occasionally gets recognized as that "so-called judge."

  • December 01, 2025

    Bristol-Myers Must Face Trimmed $6.7B Celgene Investor Suit

    A Manhattan federal judge Monday trimmed UMB Bank's lawsuit accusing Bristol-Myers Squibb of slow-walking the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval process for three drugs to avoid paying shareholders $6.7 billion owed from its 2019 acquisition of Celgene Corp.

  • December 01, 2025

    Fed Sees Shrinking Number Of Open Exam Findings At Banks

    The Federal Reserve on Monday reported broad declines in open supervisory issues at financial institutions under its oversight during the first half of the year, a shift that comes as the Trump administration is pursuing efforts to rein in examiner criticism of banks.

  • December 01, 2025

    DC Circ. Wonders If SEC Arbitration Decision Was Too Brief

    At least one judge on the D.C. Circuit wondered Monday whether the SEC presented too "bare bones" of an opinion when rejecting a petition to amend three long-running arbitration rules adopted by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

  • December 01, 2025

    Terraform Founder Seeks Five Years At Most For Crypto Fraud

    Terraform founder Do Kwon has asked a Manhattan federal judge to impose no more than five years of imprisonment after he admitted to misleading users about the stability of the crypto project, noting he still has to face "certain future detention in Korea" over the stunning collapse that wiped out $40 billion in value.

  • December 01, 2025

    Kalshi Users Bring Class Action Over 'Illegal' Sports Gambling

    Kalshi Inc. has been hit with a proposed class action in New York federal court alleging that the platform is falsely marketing itself as a "prediction market," when in reality it is running an illegal sports gambling operation.

  • December 01, 2025

    Robinhood Looks To Block Nevada Sports Wager Order

    Robinhood Derivatives LLC asked a Nevada federal judge to pause state regulators from taking action over the trading platform's sports wagers while it pursues an appeal of a related court order, arguing the case presents important, novel and complex legal questions that warrant appellate review.

  • December 01, 2025

    White House Crypto Czar Hired Clare Locke Amid NYT Probe

    The tech founder-turned-White House crypto and artificial intelligence czar David Sacks has hired defamation specialists at Clare Locke LLP to combat a New York Times investigation into potential conflicts of interest arising from his personal tech investments and role as a White House policy adviser.

  • December 01, 2025

    Ex-NBA Vet Haslem Prepares To Exit Sprawling FTX Litigation

    Longtime Miami Heat forward turned NBA broadcaster Udonis Haslem has reached a settlement with investors over his alleged role in promoting the now-defunct FTX cryptocurrency exchange before its collapse in late 2022.

  • December 01, 2025

    Chancery OKs $9.4M Deal To End Sears Take-Private Suit

    Terming it a settlement that is "easy to approve," a Delaware vice chancellor on Monday OK'd a $9.37 million deal to end a suit contesting investor payouts after a take-private deal for Sears Hometown and Outlet stores in 2019.

  • December 01, 2025

    Kessler Topaz To Lead Apple Investors In Siri AI Plans Suit

    Kessler Topaz Meltzer & Check LLP will represent a putative class of Apple investors who claim the technology giant was overly bullish on its timeline for implementing certain artificial intelligence-based features for its digital personal assistant Siri.

  • December 01, 2025

    CFTC's Pham Expands 'Due Process' For Enforcement Targets

    The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission announced changes to its investigation process Monday that the acting chair said are meant to protect the due process rights of those who are accused of wrongdoing by agency attorneys.

Expert Analysis

  • White House Report Strikes An Optimistic Note On Crypto

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    Taking seriously President Donald Trump's pledge to adopt a pro-innovation mindset toward digital assets and blockchain technologies, a recent benchmark White House report on crypto provides a comprehensive regulatory framework that takes into account the products' novel characteristics within the high-tech ecosystem, say attorneys at Davis Wright.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Negotiation Skills

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    I took one negotiation course in law school, but most of the techniques I rely on today I learned in practice, where I've discovered that the process is less about tricks or tactics, and more about clarity, preparation and communication, says Grant Schrantz at Haug Barron.

  • Opinion

    Andreessen Horowitz's Take On Delaware Is Misguided

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    Hostility toward incorporation in Delaware, as expressed in Andreessen Horowitz's recent announcement that it has moved its primary business from the First State to Nevada, is based on a basket of arguments that fail to stand up to harsher scrutiny, say attorneys at Alto Litigation.

  • Bipartisan Bill Could Aid ESOP Formation, Valuation Clarity

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    The proposed Retire through Ownership Act represents a meaningful first step toward clarifying whether transactions qualify under the adequate consideration exemption in the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, potentially eliminating the litigation risk that has chilled employee stock ownership plan formation, say attorneys at Moore & Van Allen.

  • ESG-Focused Activism Persists Despite Proxy Curbs

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    Shareholder activism focused on environmental, social and governance factors appears poised to continue, despite the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recent move toward exclusions in proxy voting proposals around ESG, say attorneys at Mintz.

  • Opinion

    Bar Exam Reform Must Expand Beyond A Single Updated Test

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    Recently released information about the National Conference of Bar Examiners’ new NextGen Uniform Bar Exam highlights why a single test is not ideal for measuring newly licensed lawyers’ competency, demonstrating the need for collaborative development, implementation and reform processes, says Gregory Bordelon at Suffolk University.

  • A Simple Way Courts Can Help Attys Avoid AI Hallucinations

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    As attorneys increasingly rely on generative artificial intelligence for legal research, courts should consider expanding online quality control programs to flag potential hallucinations — permitting counsel to correct mistakes and sparing judges the burden of imposing sanctions, say attorneys at Lankler Siffert & Wohl and Connors.

  • Opinion

    SEC Should Restore Its 2020 Proxy Adviser Rule

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    Due to concerns over proxy advisers' accuracy, reliability and transparency, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission should reinstate its 2020 rule designed to suppress the influence that they wield in shareholder voting, says Kyle Isakower at the American Council for Capital Formation.

  • What's At Stake In High Court Review Of Funds' Right To Sue

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's upcoming review of FS Credit Opportunities v. Saba Capital Master Fund, a case testing the limits of using Investment Company Act Section 47(b) to give funds a private right of action to enforce other sections of the law, could either encourage or curb similar activist investor lawsuits, say attorneys at Goodwin.

  • The Road Ahead For Digital Assets Looks Promising

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    With new legislation expected to accelerate the adoption of blockchain technology, and with regulators taking a markedly more permissive approach to digital assets, the convergence of traditional finance and decentralized finance is closer than ever, say attorneys at Dechert.

  • How Securities Defendants Might Use New Wire Fraud Ruling

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    Though the Second Circuit’s recent U.S. v. Chastain decision — vacating the conviction of an ex-OpenSea staffer — involved the wire fraud statute, insider trading defendants might attempt to import the ruling’s reasoning into the securities realm, says Jonathan Richman at Brown Rudnick.

  • M&A Ruling Reinforces High Bar For Aiding, Abetting Claims

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    The Delaware Supreme Court's recent decision in In re: Columbia Pipeline may slow the filing of aiding and abetting claims against third-party buyers in situations where buyers negotiate aggressively, putting buy-side dealmakers' minds at ease that they likely won't be liable for seeking the best possible deal, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • Series

    Creating Botanical Art Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Pressing and framing plants that I grow has shown me that pursuing an endeavor that brings you joy can lead to surprising benefits for a legal career, including mental clarity, perspective and even a bit of humility, says Douglas Selph at Morris Manning.

  • Del. Dispatch: Conflicted Transactions And New Safe Harbors

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    Two recent Delaware Court of Chancery decisions involving conflicted transactions underscore that the new safe harbors established by the Delaware General Corporation Law amendments passed in March, going forward, provide a far easier route to business judgment review of conflicted transactions than were previously available, say attorneys at Fried Frank.

  • Opinion

    The Legal Education Status Quo Is No Longer Tenable

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    As underscored by the fallout from California’s February bar exam, legal education and licensure are tethered to outdated systems, and the industry must implement several key reforms to remain relevant and responsive to 21st century legal needs, says Matthew Nehmer at The Colleges of Law.

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