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Securities
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January 05, 2026
Trade Group Pushes For SEC's Off-Channel Comms Data
The American Securities Association urged a Florida federal judge Monday to require that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission produce information showing how it calculated the massive penalties it imposed in a Biden-era off-channel communications sweep, saying that the agency had forfeited its main argument for withholding the documents.
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January 05, 2026
SEC Won't Review FINRA Delay On Carbon Offset Co. Petition
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has dismissed a bid brought by shareholders of Entrex Carbon Market Inc. to review what they said is the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority's harmful failure to act on the carbon offset trading platform's requests for a name change and approval of stock splits.
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January 05, 2026
NY Dem Looks To Curb Officials' Prediction Market Trading
Rep. Ritchie Torres, D-N.Y., is seeking to ban public officials from trading in certain prediction markets if their job gives them an edge, a representative confirmed Monday, days after an anonymous trader made a well-timed bet on the removal of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
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January 05, 2026
Deutsche Bank Pauses Norway Suit After Conn. Judge's Order
Deutsche Bank AG has notified a Connecticut judge that it abided by her order to pause a lawsuit against billionaire Alexander Vik and his daughter in Norway that stems from an unsatisfied $243 million judgment, telling the state court that it would keep the suit on hold pending a new order or a successful appeal.
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January 05, 2026
Chancery Orders $25K Daily Sanction In Trump Media Dispute
The blank-check company that took Trump Media & Technology Group Corp. public last year drew a $25,000 per-day sanction on Monday in Delaware's Court of Chancery after refusing an over $2 million legal fee advancement bill arising from litigation involving a former CEO in Florida.
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January 05, 2026
Aviation Co. Wants Rosen To Pay For 'Abusive' Legal Tactics
An aerospace company that successfully defeated a securities fraud suit is now seeking to recoup $580,000 in legal fees from Rosen Law Firm PA as punishment for its alleged "abusive tactics" in pursuing the litigation.
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January 05, 2026
More Discovery Needed In Bitcoin Miner Spat, Energy Biz Says
A U.S. energy company has told a federal judge in Seattle that further discovery is required to determine whether a Canadian cryptocurrency firm adequately complied with the requirements of a termination agreement before the court can entertain a motion for summary judgment.
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January 05, 2026
MoFo US Offices Lead 2026 Partner Promotions
More than a dozen attorneys at Morrison Foerster LLP have started the new year with new titles following the firm's Monday announcement of its partner promotions for 2026.
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January 05, 2026
Delaware Justice Karen L. Valihura To Retire In July
Delaware Supreme Court Justice Karen L. Valihura announced Monday she would leave the state's five-member top court at the end of her 12-year term in July, stepping away from one of the nation's more-important corporate law venues amid continuing political and philosophical turmoil.
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January 02, 2026
Starbucks Beats Investors' Labor Relations Suit On Appeal
A Washington state appeals court has sided with Starbucks and its corporate leadership in two shareholders' proposed class action claiming union-busting activity hurt the coffee giant's reputation, concluding the district court should throw out the case because the investors failed to show intentional wrongdoing by company directors.
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January 02, 2026
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
Delaware's Court of Chancery paddled through mostly calm waters at the year's end, with plenty of big hearings and decisions in its rearview mirror, including a recent Chancery reversal restoring Elon Musk's compensation package, earlier valued at $56 billion.
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January 02, 2026
Banking Regulation To Watch In 2026
The Trump administration is on the cusp of a pivotal year as it presses ahead in its sweeping push to reset banking regulation, with an agency funding fight, supervisory overhauls, crypto chartering and more all poised for significant developments.
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January 02, 2026
Banking Litigation To Watch In 2026
From a U.S. Supreme Court fight over the Federal Reserve to clashes over state regulatory power, in-house enforcement and the fate of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a slate of high-stakes lawsuits could shake up the banking landscape in the coming year.
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January 02, 2026
CoinFund Co-Founder Alleges Secret Plot To Strip 25% Stake
A co-founder of cryptocurrency investment firm CoinFund has sued the firm and several of its partners in Delaware Chancery Court, alleging that they orchestrated a covert scheme to strip him of a roughly 25% equity stake using undisclosed written consents, a non-pro rata distribution structure and what he calls a sham valuation designed to minimize his payout.
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January 02, 2026
Bankruptcy And Restructuring Trends To Watch In 2026
Bankruptcy practitioners expect restructuring activity to remain elevated in the year ahead as more debt comes due and businesses continue to grapple with economic uncertainty. Major court rulings on bankruptcy plans, innovations in out-of-court debt deals and shifts in what is permitted under Chapter 11 will also have important effects in 2026, experts told Law360.
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January 02, 2026
Shareholder Litigation To Watch In 2026
A Fourth Circuit case that could be important to the future of class action practice, a dispute between Elon Musk and former Twitter shareholders and a high court battle over the Investment Company Act are all on the list of cases that securities practitioners will be following in 2026.
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January 02, 2026
SEC Expected To Tackle Exec Comp, Private Investing In 2026
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is expected to hit the ground running this year on fulfilling Chairman Paul Atkins' agenda to lessen the regulatory burden on public and private companies alike, with the agency potentially gearing up to propose changes to everything from the reporting of C-suite pay packages to the accredited investor definition.
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January 02, 2026
California Cases To Watch In 2026
Legal experts following California courts in 2026 are tracking high-stakes personal injury, antitrust and copyright battles against giants in the social media, artificial intelligence and entertainment industries, as well as wide-ranging legal disputes arising from Los Angeles wildfires and high-profile appeals pending before the California Supreme Court.
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January 02, 2026
California Legislation And Regulations To Watch In 2026
Legal experts expect California lawmakers and regulators to continue to grapple with the artificial intelligence boom, various battles with the Trump administration and new climate disclosure requirements in 2026. Here's a short list of the major developments that Golden State attorneys will be watching.
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January 02, 2026
Crypto To Take On Rulemaking Push, And Pushback, In 2026
The Trump administration's pledge to make the U.S. the "crypto capital of the world" invigorated a wave of crypto policy efforts from Congress and federal agencies last year, but experts say 2026 will be about sorting the devils in the details.
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January 02, 2026
Mangione, Trump, Sports Scandals Among NY Cases To Watch
The coming year's major developments in New York courts include politically charged criminal cases with ties to President Donald Trump, gambling investigations that have snared high-profile athletes and charges against murder suspect Luigi Mangione.
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January 02, 2026
Benefits Attys Lock In On High Court As 2026 Gets Underway
A withdrawal liability case set to be argued at the U.S. Supreme Court in January and a pair of high court petitions from Home Depot workers and Parker-Hannifin will be top of mind for Employee Retirement Income Security Act practitioners as the new year kicks off. Here's a look at those three cases.
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January 01, 2026
Blue Slip Fight Looms Over Trump's 2026 Judicial Outlook
In 2025, President Donald Trump put 20 district and six circuit judges on the federal bench. In the year ahead, a fight over home state senators' ability to block district court picks could make it more difficult for him to match that record.
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January 01, 2026
4 High Court Cases To Watch This Spring
The U.S. Supreme Court justices will return from the winter holidays to tackle several constitutional disputes that range from who is entitled to birthright citizenship to whether transgender individuals are entitled to heightened levels of protection from discrimination.
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January 01, 2026
BigLaw Leaders Tackle Growth, AI, Remote Work In New Year
Rapid business growth, cultural changes caused by remote work and generative AI are creating challenges and opportunities for law firm leaders going into the New Year. Here, seven top firm leaders share what’s running through their minds as they lie awake at night.
Expert Analysis
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What CFTC Push For Tokenized Collateral Means For Crypto
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission's recent request for comment on the use of tokenized products as collateral in derivatives markets signals that it is expanding the scope and form of eligible collateral, and could broaden the potential use cases for crypto-assets held in tokenized form, say attorneys at Dechert.
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Lessons From Del. Chancery Court's New Activision Decision
The Delaware Court of Chancery's recent decision in AP-Fonden v. Activision Blizzard, declining to dismiss certain fiduciary duty claims at the pleading stage, offers takeaways for boards considering a sale, including the importance of playing an active role in the merger process and documenting key board materials, say attorneys at Cleary.
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Series
Practicing Stoicism Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Practicing Stoicism, by applying reason to ignore my emotions and govern my decisions, has enabled me to approach challenging situations in a structured way, ultimately providing advice singularly devoted to a client's interest, says John Baranello at Moses & Singer.
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How Courts Treat Nonservice Clauses For Financial Advisers
Financial advisers considering a job change should carefully consider recent cases that examine controlling state law for nonservice and nonacceptance provisions to prepare for potential legal challenges from former firms, says Andrew Shedlock at Kutak Rock.
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Series
The Biz Court Digest: Texas, One Year In
A year after the Texas Business Court's first decision, it's clear that Texas didn't just copy Delaware and instead built something uniquely its own, combining specialization with constitutional accountability and creating a model that looks forward without losing touch with the state's democratic and statutory roots, says Chris Bankler at Jackson Walker.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Educating Your Community
Nearly two decades prosecuting scammers and elder fraud taught me that proactively educating the public about the risks they face and the rights they possess is essential to building trust within our communities, empowering otherwise vulnerable citizens and preventing wrongdoers from gaining a foothold, says Roger Handberg at GrayRobinson.
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Shifting Crypto Landscape Complicates Tornado Cash Verdict
Amid shifts in the decentralized finance regulatory landscape, the mixed verdict in the prosecution of Tornado Cash’s founder may represent the high-water mark in a cryptocurrency enforcement strategy from which the U.S. Department of Justice has begun to retreat, say attorneys at Venable.
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5 Crisis Lawyering Skills For An Age Of Uncertainty
As attorneys increasingly face unprecedented and pervasive situations — from prosecutions of law enforcement officials to executive orders targeting law firms — they must develop several essential competencies of effective crisis lawyering, says Ray Brescia at Albany Law School.
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Blockchain May Offer The Investor Protection SEC Seeks
As the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission moves to control the ballooning costs of the consolidated audit trail and attempts to finally give regulators a unified, real-time picture of trading, blockchain demonstrates what it looks like when that kind of transparency is a baseline feature, not an aspirational overlay, says Tuongvy Le at Veda Tech Labs.
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$2B PDVSA Ruling Offers Insight Into Foreign-Issued Debt
A New York federal court's recent decision denying a request by PDVSA, Venezuela's state-owned oil company, to refuse enforcement of $2 billion in defaulted bonds serves as a guide for the scope of review required in assessing the validity of foreign-issued securities with New York choice-of-law provisions, say attorneys at Cleary.
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Del. Dispatch: Chancery Expands On Caremark Red Flags
The Delaware Court of Chancery’s recent Brewer v. Turner decision, allowing a shareholder derivative suit against the board of Regions Bank to proceed, takes a more expansive view as to what constitutes red flags, bad faith and corporate trauma in Caremark claims, say attorneys at Fried Frank.
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Opinion
It's Time For The Judiciary To Fix Its Cybersecurity Problem
After recent reports that hackers have once again infiltrated federal courts’ electronic case management systems, the judiciary should strengthen its cybersecurity practices in line with executive branch standards, outlining clear roles and responsibilities for execution, says Ilona Cohen at HackerOne.
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Who Will Regulate Insider Trading In Prediction Markets?
The possibilities for insider trading have greatly expanded in the brave new world of prediction markets, and both the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission and U.S. Department of Justice could bring enforcement actions in the space, so businesses should revisit their insider trading and confidential information policies, say attorneys at Fenwick.
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Opinion
Crypto Bills' Narrow Scope Guarantees Continued Uncertainty
The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act and Responsible Financial Innovation Act aim to make the $4 trillion crypto market more transparent and less susceptible to fraud, but their focus on digital assets sold in investment contract transactions promises continued uncertainty for the industry, says Joe Hall at Davis Polk.
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Parody Defendants Are Finding Success Post-Jack Daniel's
Recent decisions demonstrate that, although the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Jack Daniel's v. VIP Products did benefit trademark plaintiffs by significantly limiting the First Amendment expressive use defense, courts also now appear to be less likely to find a parodic work likely to cause confusion, says Andrew Michaels at University of Houston Law Center.