Securities

  • 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

    9th Circ. Orders New Insider-Trading Trial Over Juror Bias

    A Ninth Circuit panel on Tuesday ordered a new trial for a Los Angeles man convicted of insider trading on tips from a JPMorgan Chase analyst, holding that a lower court erred by not excusing a juror who expressed concerns about his ability to be fair.

  • April 21, 2026

    Biotech Co. Investors Clash Over 'Self-Dealing' Claim

    Attorneys for a biopharmaceutical and technology company stockholder and a group of venture investors sharply disagreed Tuesday over whether a financing deal was a lifeline for a struggling company or a self-serving maneuver that enriched insiders, as they argued a motion to dismiss the derivative suit in the Delaware Chancery Court.

  • April 21, 2026

    Ameriprise Didn't Disclose Records Breach, Suit Says

    Financial services company Ameriprise was hit with a proposed class action in Minnesota federal court accusing it of failing to safeguard customers' data from cybercriminals, resulting in a breach of its records in March.

  • April 21, 2026

    SEC Accuses Calif. Real Estate Fund Of Ponzi-Like Scheme

    The CEO and former chief financial officer of a real estate fund manager agreed to settle SEC allegations that they misused millions from a fund they controlled, including by doling out over $15 million to investors "in Ponzi-like fashion" and improperly sending another $6 million to other companies they controlled.

  • April 21, 2026

    Meta Denies Knowing Of Social Media Pump-And-Dump Ads

    Meta Platforms Inc. had no knowledge of alleged pump-and-dump scam advertisements on its social media platforms, it has said, urging a California federal judge to dismiss a suit seeking to hold the tech company responsible for losses from the scams.

  • April 21, 2026

    Plug Power Gets Some Claims Snipped From Investor Suit

    A Delaware federal judge has trimmed a shareholder suit against hydrogen fuel cell company Plug Power Inc., finding that statements about the company's revenue projections and one of its production facilities are inactionable.

  • April 21, 2026

    Del. Supreme Court Upholds Ruling On Truth Social Shares

    The Delaware Supreme Court has affirmed a lower court ruling granting additional stock to the founding shareholder in the company that took President Donald Trump's Truth Social Media public, turning away a request from the shareholder for a second shot to prove it is owed even more shares.

  • April 21, 2026

    Buyer Sues PE Firm, Alleging Fraud In $26M Manufacturer Sale

    A Michigan-based buyer has sued a private equity firm and two executives in Delaware's Court of Chancery, accusing them of orchestrating a yearslong scheme to inflate a manufacturing company's value and fraudulently induce a $26 million sale.

  • April 21, 2026

    Scooter Rental Company Can't Escape SEC Fraud Suit

    A Florida federal judge denied scooter rental company Go X's bid to dismiss a suit brought by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission alleging it misled hundreds of investors to raise $4 million, finding the agency has adequately alleged the company's investment program offered scooters as unregistered securities.

  • April 21, 2026

    Judge Eyes Ballot Deadline In Feud Over BJ's Climate Study

    A Massachusetts federal judge on Tuesday said he's eager to cut to the chase in a dispute over whether BJ's Wholesale Club must allow shareholders to vote on a climate study proposal, suggesting the case could be resolved ahead of a looming proxy ballot deadline. 

  • April 21, 2026

    FHFA Says High Court Ruling Dooms Shareholder Verdict

    An attorney for the Federal Housing Finance Agency told the D.C. Circuit on Tuesday that the agency had clear authority to act in its own interest as conservator for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the wake of the 2008 housing market crash rather than prioritize the interest of the companies' shareholders.

  • 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.

  • April 21, 2026

    NY AG Sues Coinbase, Gemini Over Event Contract 'Gambling'

    New York Attorney General Letitia James sued Coinbase and Gemini Tuesday, accusing them of "illegally running gambling operations" in the state through their prediction market offerings in twin actions that join a mounting pile of litigation between state gambling regulators and prediction market platforms.

  • April 21, 2026

    Warsh Rejects Claim He'd Be Trump's 'Sock Puppet' At Fed

    Federal Reserve chair nominee Kevin Warsh sought at his Tuesday confirmation hearing to rebut Democratic accusations that he would be a White House "sock puppet," distancing himself from President Donald Trump's calls for rate cuts and downplaying their significance.

  • April 21, 2026

    Attys Get $20M Cut Of $84M Wells Fargo ESOP Deal

    A Minnesota federal judge has greenlit a $20 million fee request from attorneys who secured an $84 million settlement in a suit claiming Wells Fargo violated federal benefits law by using dividends earned by its employee stock ownership fund to offset its 401(k) contributions.

  • April 20, 2026

    Armistice Head Testifies He Accidentally Deleted Texts

    Armistice Capital's founder, who is facing investor claims that the hedge fund dumped its artificially inflated shares in pharmaceutical company Vaxart for $250 million, told a California federal jury Monday that during a physical therapy session held over Skype, he accidentally deleted key text messages with another Armistice executive.

  • April 20, 2026

    UK Wine Fraudster Gets 10 Years For $97M Ponzi Scheme

    A Brooklyn federal judge on Monday sentenced a former executive of a U.K. wine company to 10 years in prison for his role in a $97 million Ponzi scheme that defrauded investors in loans that were falsely billed as being fully collateralized by high-value wine collections, calling it a "very brazen crime that led to mass amounts of theft."

  • April 20, 2026

    Providence Health's Sour Investment Cost $70M, Retirees Say

    Retirement plan participants have hit hospital system Providence Health & Services with a proposed class action accusing the Washington-based nonprofit of losing nearly $70 million in assets by sticking with an underperforming mutual fund that lagged behind similar investment options.

  • April 20, 2026

    ImmunityBio Stock Fell After FDA Letter, Derivative Suit Says

    Biotechnology company ImmunityBio Inc.'s stock slipped by 21% after misleading statements on a podcast by the company's founder about its lead cancer drug prompted the issuance of a warning letter from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, according to a shareholder derivative suit in California federal court.

  • April 20, 2026

    SEC Says Adviser Traded On Firm Clients' Confidential Info

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission sued an ex-investment advisory firm associate in Manhattan federal court on Monday, accusing him of using a close relative's brokerage account to trade ahead of market-moving announcements by three biopharmaceutical and biotechnology companies that his firm was researching.

  • April 20, 2026

    Two Harbors Shareholder Sues To Stop CrossCountry Deal

    A shareholder for Two Harbors Investment Corp. filed a lawsuit in Illinois federal court asking a judge to block the real estate investment trust's merger with mortgage lender CrossCountry.

  • April 20, 2026

    SEC, CFTC Propose Rules To Relax Private Fund Reporting

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday proposed relaxing certain reporting requirements for hedge funds and other private fund advisers by allowing smaller firms to forego filing a disclosure used to monitor systemic risk and nixing some of its questions around volatility, event reporting and indirect exposure altogether.

  • April 20, 2026

    Swim Training Co.'s IPO Was Pump-And-Dump, Suit Says

    Singapore swim-school operator Fitness Champs Holdings Ltd. was hit with a proposed class action accusing it of concealing a social media-driven "pump-and-dump" scheme in which stock promoters posed as financial advisers to hype the stock through online forums, destroying the company's market capitalization after the shares were dumped.

  • April 20, 2026

    SEC Says Trader Ran $5M Market Manipulation Scheme

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday filed suit against a trader based in Puerto Rico who allegedly manipulated the prices of hundreds of securities and deceived investors into buying them at artificially inflated prices, netting him more than $5 million in illicit profits.

Expert Analysis

  • 2026 Int'l Arbitration Trends: M&A And Securities Disputes

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    Recent developments — such as the high-profile arbitration between ExxonMobil and Chevron, and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's shift on its long-standing opposition to mandatory arbitration clauses in registration statements — highlight key issues to consider when drafting relevant agreements and arbitrating M&A disputes, say attorneys at Cleary.

  • How A 1947 Tugboat Ruling May Shape Work Product In AI Era

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    Rapid advances in generative artificial intelligence test work-product principles first articulated in the U.S. Supreme Court’s nearly 80-year-old Hickman v. Taylor decision, as courts and ethics bodies confront whether disclosure of attorneys’ AI prompts and outputs would reveal their thought processes, say Larry Silver and Sasha Burton at Langsam Stevens.

  • What Productivity EO May Mean For Defense Industrial Base

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    President Donald Trump’s recent executive order barring stock buybacks and dividend payments by "underperforming" defense contractors represents a significant policy shift from traditional oversight of the defense industrial base toward direct intervention in corporate decision-making, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.

  • What's New In ISS' Benchmark Voting Policy Updates For 2026

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    Companies should audit their governance structures and disclosures to prepare for the upcoming proxy season in light of Institutional Shareholder Services' 2026 policy updates, which include tighter guardrails on capital structures and director compensation, and more disclosure-driven assessments of environmental and social shareholder proposals, say attorneys at Fenwick.

  • Navigating Privilege Law Patchwork In Dual-Purpose Comms

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    Three years after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to resolve a circuit split in In re: Grand Jury, federal courts remain split as to when attorney-client privilege applies to dual-purpose legal and business communications, and understanding the fragmented landscape is essential for managing risks, say attorneys at Covington.

  • Decoding The SEC's Plans To Revitalize The US IPO Market

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    Chairman Paul Atkins' recent speech showcased the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's plans to ease certain disclosure burdens, rein in politicized shareholder voting and mitigate litigation risk, which could encourage more U.S. companies to seek public listings stateside and make U.S. stock exchanges more competitive for foreign companies, say attorneys at Baker McKenzie.

  • Banking Regulation Themes To Anticipate In 2026

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    The banking enforcement and rulemaking agenda for this year is likely to reflect a mix of targeted reform, deregulatory recalibration and new priorities aligned with supervisory modernization, says Kim Prior at King & Spalding.

  • Easing Equity Research Firewall Shows SEC Open To Updates

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s recent agreement to modify a decades-old settlement meant to limit investment bankers’ influence over research analysts within major broker-dealer firms reflects a shift toward a commission that recognizes how rules can be modernized to lighten compliance burdens without eliminating core safeguards, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray.

  • Series

    Calif. Banking Brief: All The Notable Legal Updates In Q4

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    The regulatory and litigation developments for California financial institutions in the fourth quarter of 2025 were incremental but consequential, with the Department of Financial Protection & Innovation relying on public enforcement actions to articulate expectations, and lawmakers and privacy regulators playing a role as well, says Stephen Britt at Stinson.

  • Series

    Fly-Fishing Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Much like skilled attorneys, the best anglers prize preparation, presentation and patience while respecting their adversaries — both human and trout, says Rob Braverman at Braverman Greenspun.

  • 4 Ways GCs Can Manage Growing Service Of Process Volume

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    As automation and arbitration increase the volume of legal filings, in-house counsel must build scalable service of process systems that strengthen corporate governance and manage risk in real time, says Paul Mathews at Corporation Service Co.

  • Series

    NY Banking Brief: All The Notable Legal Updates In Q4

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    In the fourth quarter of last year, New York state enacted several developments that affect financial services regulation and business, cementing upcoming compliance obligations including cybersecurity best practices and retail stores' cash management, says Chris Bonner at Barclay Damon.

  • SDNY Atty Signals Return To Private Fund Valuation Scrutiny

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    Recent remarks by the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York — hinting that regulators are renewing their focus on private fund advisers who overvalue portfolio assets to drive up investor fees — should prompt firms to review their valuation methodologies and address potential conflicts of interest now, say attorneys at Debevoise.

  • IP Appellate Decisions Show 4 Shifts In 2025

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    In 2025, intellectual property decisions issued by the Ninth, D.C., and Federal Circuits trended toward tightening doctrinal boundaries, whether to account for technological developments in existing legal regimes, or to refine areas with some ambiguity, says Nate Sabri at Perkins Coie.

  • Series

    The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Forming Measurable Ties

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    Relationship-building should begin as early as possible in a law firm merger, as intentional pathways to bringing people together drive collaboration, positive client response, engagements and growth, says Amie Colby at Troutman.

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