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Securities
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November 03, 2025
Fla. Cannabis Banking Biz Broke Law, Investor Suit Says
An investor in Florida-based First National Bank of Pasco hit the bank with a lawsuit alleging that its inability to manage lending to cannabis industry operators has made it prone to regulatory scrutiny and financial harm, including a recent investigation by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
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November 03, 2025
Chancery Considers Reviewing Icahn's Illumina Settlement
A Delaware Chancery Court hearing on resolving class and derivative claims over Illumina fiduciary data breaches connected to the company's $8 billion acquisition of Grail Inc. was sidelined Monday by questions over a private settlement.
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November 03, 2025
Dorsey & Whitney Opens In Chicago, Joining Other Firms
Dorsey & Whitney LLP announced Monday that it has opened a Chicago office led by a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission alumnus from Perkins Coie, who arrives along with six colleagues.
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November 03, 2025
StraightPath Stock Clients Got Paid, Not Duped, NY Jury Told
Securities vendor StraightPath paid profit-hungry clients "a ton of money," counsel for one of its three founders told a Manhattan federal jury Monday, pushing back after prosecutors cited "overwhelming" evidence of fraud in an alleged $400 million "web of lies."
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November 03, 2025
Bernstein Litowitz, Robbins Geller To Lead $8.9B Class Action
The Delaware Chancery Court has tapped Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann LLP and Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP to lead stockholder litigation over an $8.9 billion take-private deal, citing the firms' alignment with institutional investors holding the largest stake.
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November 03, 2025
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
From billion-dollar pharma feuds to shifting equity deadlines, Delaware's courts saw another week of battles over mergers, fiduciary duty and judicial limits.
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November 03, 2025
Amazon, OpenAI Ink $38B Compute Infrastructure Deal
Amazon Web Services said Monday it has entered into a seven-year, $38 billion strategic partnership with OpenAI to provide computing infrastructure that will run and scale the ChatGPT maker's core artificial intelligence workloads.
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October 31, 2025
JPMorgan Kept Biz With 'Child Sleaze' Epstein Despite Flags
JPMorgan Chase reported Jeffrey Epstein's suspicious cash transactions suggesting sex-trafficking years before the financier faced felony charges, but the bank continued to do business with him even as banking executives joked internally about Epstein as a "known child sleaze," according to documents unsealed in New York federal court Friday.
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October 31, 2025
Bank Group Cautions OCC On Fintech Trust Charter Bids
Another major banking trade group is pushing back on efforts by a string of digital asset and payment firms to obtain federal banking charters from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, warning that granting the charters would invite legal and systemic risks.
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October 31, 2025
Citadel Securities Moves To Block New IEX Options Exchange
Citadel Securities LLC is calling on the Eleventh Circuit to act quickly to stop a new options exchange from going live early next year, saying Friday the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission blessed the exchange despite its unique structure threatening to disadvantage all other market participants.
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October 31, 2025
Binance Founder Demands Warren Retract 'Defamatory' Claim
The recently pardoned founder of crypto exchange Binance is demanding Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., retract alleged misstatements criticizing the president's decision to grant clemency following reported business ties between Binance and the Trump family.
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October 31, 2025
Aircraft Co. Investor Wants Vote Blocked On PE-Backed Merger
A shareholder of aircraft lessor Air Lease Corp. has filed a lawsuit seeking to block an upcoming vote on the company's proposed merger with an Ireland-based holding company that he says will unfairly benefit the lessor's board members.
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October 31, 2025
SEC Extends Fee Cap Compliance Dates After DC Circ. Ruling
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday extended the compliance deadlines for new rules that will cap the fees that exchanges can charge investors and allow exchanges to quote stock prices in half-penny increments after the D.C. Circuit rejected calls to overturn the rules.
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October 31, 2025
Bayer Investors Get Final OK For $38M Settlement, Atty Fees
A California federal judge has finalized a $38 million settlement between Germany-based Bayer AG and a class of investors who claim the company deceived them about the litigation risks of acquiring Roundup producer Monsanto, with the lead plaintiffs' attorney saying the deal reaffirmed investors' ability to hold foreign companies responsible for violating U.S. securities laws.
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October 31, 2025
Alphabet Investors Seek Class Cert. In Google Probe Suit
Alphabet Inc. investors have asked a California federal judge to grant class certification in a suit against the Google parent company and its CEO, Sundar Pichai, over an allegedly false statement made to Congress in 2020 about the fairness of ad auctions, arguing it is a "textbook example of a case warranting class action treatment."
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October 31, 2025
Drone Co. Says 'Disgruntled' Ex-VP Tried To Torpedo Funding
A manufacturer of emergency response drones is characterizing a state court lawsuit brought by its former vice president of sales that claims he was shortchanged on pay and commissions as the grumblings of a "disgruntled" ex-employee who allegedly tried to sabotage the company.
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October 31, 2025
Obesity Drugmaker Escapes Clinical Trial Securities Suit
Biopharmaceutical company BioAge Labs Inc. has, for now, escaped a suit alleging investors were hurt by plummeting share prices after the company unexpectedly halted a clinical trial for a weight loss drug, saying that the investors failed to plausibly show the company did not properly disclose risks to the trial.
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October 31, 2025
Execs Settle Real Estate Platform Dispute For $30M
Two directors of Fang Holdings Ltd. and their affiliates reached a settlement ending claims they stripped the Chinese online real estate portal operator of its value for personal gain, agreeing to a $30 million cash payment and share transfer.
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October 31, 2025
FirstEnergy Asks 6th Circ. To Deny Bid For Bribery Probe Info
FirstEnergy Corp. asked the Sixth Circuit to make clear that investors suing it over a billion-dollar bribery scandal aren't entitled to depose its directors, officers and employees about internal investigations undertaken by Jones Day and Squire Patton Boggs.
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October 31, 2025
TXSE Boasts $250M Total Capital After Latest Funding Round
TXSE Group, a company preparing to launch a Texas-based stock exchange similar to the likes of the New York Stock Exchange, revealed Friday it has raised more than $250 million in total capital following its second financing round that welcomed new investor J.P. Morgan.
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October 30, 2025
Feds Rest $25M Crypto Theft Case Against MIT Grads
Manhattan federal prosecutors Thursday rested their case against two MIT-educated brothers accused of leveraging an Ethereum software glitch to fraudulently obtain $25 million in cryptocurrency, signing off with a series of the defendants' Google searches following the alleged theft that referred to famous white collar criminals and their prison terms.
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October 30, 2025
FINRA Fines CIBC $425K Over Flawed Options Reporting
CIBC World Markets Corp. will pay a $425,000 fine to end Financial Industry Regulatory Authority allegations it failed to properly report over-the-counter options positions over 1.4 million times in a six-year period.
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October 30, 2025
PE Fund, Adviser Overvalued Portfolio, Investor Suit Claims
A private equity fund faces a proposed investor class action alleging its net asset value collapsed after it invested heavily in companies that benefited the fund's owners, and falsified their valuations to conceal the "severe underperformance" of these portfolio companies.
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October 30, 2025
GOP Senator Floats Fair Access Bill In 'Debanking' Push
Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., introduced draft legislation Thursday that he says builds on an earlier attempt to prevent banks from blocking conservatives or disfavored industries from opening accounts, proposing the creation of a fair access standard that allows regulators and attorneys general to sue noncompliant banks.
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October 30, 2025
Fiber Optics Co. Agrees To Reforms To End Derivative Suit
Fiber optic equipment company Luna Innovations Inc. has reached a deal with its investors to settle their derivative claims alleging the company was damaged by its failure to properly recognize revenue in its filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Expert Analysis
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Dropped Case Shows SEC Focus On Independent Directors
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recent liquidity rule case against Pinnacle Advisors, despite its dismissal by the commission, serves as a reminder that the SEC expects directors to embrace their role as active, probing fiduciaries, says Dianne Descoteaux at MFDF.
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How Crypto Embrace Will Affect Banks And Credit Unions
The second Trump administration has moved aggressively to promote crypto-friendly reforms and initiatives, and as the embrace of stablecoins and distributed ledger technology grows, community banks and credit unions should think strategically as to how they might use these innovations to best serve their customers, says Jay Spruill at Woods Rogers.
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Navigating The SEC's Evolving Foreign Private Issuer Regime
As the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission reevaluates foreign private issuer eligibility, FPIs face not only incremental compliance costs but also a potential reshaping of listing strategies, capital access, enforcement exposure and global regulatory coordination, potential unintended effects that deserve further exploration, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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Opinion
Expert Reports Can't Replace Facts In Securities Fraud Cases
The Ninth Circuit's 2023 decision in Nvidia v. Ohman Fonder — and the U.S. Supreme Court's punt on the case in 2024 — could invite the meritless securities litigation the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act was designed to prevent by substituting expert opinions for facts to substantiate complaint assertions, say attorneys at A&O Shearman.
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Opinion
High Court, Not A Single Justice, Should Decide On Recusal
As public trust in the U.S. Supreme Court continues to decline, the court should adopt a collegial framework in which all justices decide questions of recusal together — a reform that respects both judicial independence and due process for litigants, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.
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What Cross-Border Task Force Says About SEC's Priorities
The formation of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's cross-border task force, focused on investigating U.S. federal securities law violations overseas, underscores Chairman Paul Atkins' prioritization of classic fraud schemes, particularly involving foreign entities, say attorneys at Cleary.
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Series
Traveling Solo Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Traveling by myself has taught me to assess risk, understand tone and stay calm in high-pressure situations, which are not only useful life skills, but the foundation of how I support my clients, says Lacey Gutierrez at Group Five Legal.
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6th Circ. FirstEnergy Ruling Protects Key Legal Privileges
The Sixth Circuit’s recent grant of mandamus relief in In re: First Energy Corp. confirms that the attorney-client privilege and work-product protections apply to internal investigation materials, ultimately advancing the public interest, say attorneys at Cooley.
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Del. Ruling Reaffirms High Bar To Plead Minority Control
The Delaware Court of Chancery's recent decision in Witmer v. Armistice maintains Delaware's strict approach to control and provides increased predictability for minority investors in their investment and corporate governance decisions, says Elena Davis at Ropes & Gray.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Client Service
Law school teaches you how to interpret the law, but it doesn't teach you some of the key ways to keeping clients satisfied, lessons that I've learned in the most unexpected of places: a book on how to be a butler, says Gregory Ramos at Armstrong Teasdale.
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How Occasional Activists Have Reshaped Proxy Fights
The sophistication and breadth of first-time activist engagement continue to shape corporate governance and strategic outcomes, as evidenced across corporate annual meetings this summer, meaning advisers should anticipate continued innovation in tactics, increased regulatory complexity, and a persistent focus on board accountability, say attorneys at MoFo.
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US-German M&A Hits Its Stride Despite Economic Headwinds
Against expectations, dealmakers in both the U.S. and Germany are actively seeking investment opportunities in each other's markets, with 2025 shaping up to be the strongest year in recent memory, say attorneys at White & Case.
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Enter The Wu-Tang Ruling That May Change Trade Secret Law
A New York federal court's recent holding that a Wu-Tang Clan album qualifies as a trade secret provides the first federal framework for analyzing trade secret claims involving assets valued primarily for exclusivity, potentially reshaping Defend Trade Secrets Act jurisprudence for the digital economy, says Jason Bradford at Jenner & Block.
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How Financial Cos. Can Prep As NYDFS Cyber Changes Loom
Financial institutions supervised by the New York State Department of Financial Services can prepare for two critical cybersecurity requirements relating to multifactor authentication and asset inventories, effective Nov. 1, by conducting gap analyses and allocating resources to high-risk assets, among other steps, say attorneys at Pillsbury.
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Opinion
Ending Quarterly Reporting Would Erode Investor Protection
President Donald Trump recently called for an end to the long-standing practice of corporate quarterly reporting, but doing so would reduce transparency, create information asymmetries, provide more opportunities for corporate fraud and risk increased stock price volatility, while not meaningfully increasing long-term investments, say attorneys at Bleichmar Fonti.