Securities

  • January 29, 2026

    Tribal Gaming Groups' Support Blocked In Tenn. Kalshi Case

    A Tennessee federal judge has denied a bid by tribal groups including the Indian Gaming Association and the National Congress of American Indians to file an amicus brief in prediction market Kalshi's suit against state gambling regulators over the company's sports wagers.

  • January 29, 2026

    FINRA Fines Compliance Chief, Firm For Reg BI Failures

    The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority has fined a broker-dealer and its chief compliance officer for allegedly failing to supervise representatives' recommendations of certain risky and illiquid bonds, with the latter also agreeing to a three-month suspension.

  • January 29, 2026

    RealNetworks Can't Exit Investor Suit Over Take-Private Deal

    RealNetworks Inc., an artificial intelligence-focused digital media company, cannot escape a shareholder suit alleging that the company and its top brass misled investors in a 2022 take-private transaction, a Washington federal judge has ruled.

  • January 29, 2026

    Zuora Investor Sues Over $1.7B Silver Lake Take-Private Deal

    An investor in software as service subscription software venture Zuora Inc. has opened a proposed class suit seeking damages in connection with Silver Lake Group's $1.7 billion take-private acquisition of the company, naming both Silver Lake and managing panther Joseph Osnoss and alleging breaches of fiduciary duty.

  • January 29, 2026

    6th Circ. Backs Gov't In $125K Crypto Forfeiture Case

    The Sixth Circuit has sided with the U.S. government in a suit over its rights to more than $100,000 in allegedly laundered cryptocurrency, ruling the previous receivers of the funds missed the deadline to bring a claim after the government seized the assets.

  • January 29, 2026

    Inspire Medical Leaders Face Suit Over Apnea Device Rollout

    Brass of Inspire Medical Systems Inc. face shareholder derivative claims they breached their fiduciary duties by concealing issues affecting the launch of the company's latest sleep apnea device, damaging investors after its trading prices fell 32% when the issues were disclosed.

  • January 29, 2026

    GOP-Led Crypto Bill Clears Senate Panel In Party-Line Vote

    The Senate Agriculture Committee advanced a Republican-led proposal to regulate crypto markets on Thursday with a vote that fell starkly along party lines after Democrats made clear they would not support the bill without provisions to prevent public officials from profiting from crypto ventures.

  • January 29, 2026

    Debevoise Appoints Commercial Litigation Group Co-Leaders

    Debevoise & Plimpton LLP promoted two litigators to be co-chairs of its commercial litigation practice, the firm has announced.

  • January 29, 2026

    Shoddy Funds Cost Bloomberg 401(k) Investors Big, Suit Says

    Bloomberg may have lost its workers almost $200 million by failing to nix two underperforming investment funds from its $5 billion retirement plan, according to a proposed class action filed in New York federal court on Thursday claiming the financial data and media company shirked its fiduciary duties.

  • January 29, 2026

    TreeHouse Foods Sued In Chancery For Docs On $2.9B Sale

    A TreeHouse Foods stockholder filed suit in Delaware's Court of Chancery late Wednesday for expedited access to withheld documents on the company's $2.9 billion agreement in November to sell the packaged snack and beverage company to affiliates of Investindustrial VIII SCSp, an independently managed group of European investment, holding and advisory companies.

  • January 28, 2026

    Powell Says Cook Case May Be 'Most Important' In Fed History

    Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Wednesday that President Donald Trump's U.S. Supreme Court bid to oust Fed Gov. Lisa Cook represents "perhaps the most important" case in the history of the central bank, defending his move to attend the high court's recent hearing on the matter.

  • January 28, 2026

    Northern Trust VP Stole Millions From Elderly Client, Suits Say

    An elderly banking heiress and her nephew have sued the Northern Trust Co., alleging the wealth management firm failed to safeguard their assets from a now-former vice president who helped himself to millions of dollars of their funds.

  • January 28, 2026

    SEC Says Musk Can't Fight 'Uncontested' Facts In Twitter Case

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday further urged a D.C. federal judge to grant it an early win in the agency's enforcement action against Elon Musk over his Twitter stock purchases, saying Musk's recent opposition brief "only confirms that the court should grant" summary judgment.

  • January 28, 2026

    Judge Vacates $1.3M Deal After 7 Years Pass With No Payment

    A California federal judge has vacated an order from seven years ago preliminarily approving a $1.3 million settlement of claims brought by Wins Finance Holdings Inc. shareholders, saying Wins' failure to secure approval from the Chinese government to release the funds makes it unlikely the investors will get paid under the deal.

  • January 28, 2026

    Data Co.'s Brass, Top Customer Face SEC 'Round-Trip' Claims

    Executives of a now-bankrupt data intelligence company face U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission claims that they conspired with one of the company's biggest customers on a so-called round-trip accounting scheme to overstate the company's revenue and become a more attractive target for a special purpose acquisition company.

  • January 28, 2026

    CFTC Taps Treasury Atty To Be General Counsel

    The Commodity Futures Trading Commission announced Wednesday it has hired a Treasury Department lawyer with BigLaw experience to serve as the derivatives regulator's new general counsel.

  • January 28, 2026

    Tax Court Rejects Aventis' Securitizing Debt Assets

    Pharmaceutical giant Aventis Inc. is ineligible for a favorable tax treatment on its securitization of financial assets, the U.S. Tax Court ruled Wednesday, finding the company did not comply with statutory requirements and failed to show it was not the beneficial owner of the assets.

  • January 28, 2026

    Crypto Investors Want Mark Cuban Suit Sent To Texas

    Crypto investors suing billionaire Mark Cuban and his former NBA team the Dallas Mavericks over their alleged promotion of the collapsed exchange Voyager have asked a Florida federal judge to transfer their claims to Texas, a month after the judge dismissed the claims on personal jurisdiction grounds.

  • January 28, 2026

    Chinese Man Gets 46 Months In $37M Pig Butchering Scam

    A Chinese national was sentenced to 46 months in prison Tuesday in California federal court for participating in a global network that tricked 174 victims lured in from dating apps into pouring money into fake digital asset investments, and ultimately laundering $36.9 million in cryptocurrency proceeds to scam centers overseas.

  • January 28, 2026

    Investor Says Cannabis Biz Shielded Tax Debt Before Sale

    A Los Angeles investor claimed in a state lawsuit that he was defrauded out of $100,000 by a cannabis business owner and brokers who sold him shares in a dispensary without warning him that its tax debt was nearly $150,000.

  • January 28, 2026

    SEC Urged To Adopt Insider Trading Rules For Foreign Firms

    A former member of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is among a trio of academics pressing the agency to write rules cracking down on insider trading at foreign companies that trade on U.S. exchanges, urging action before a congressionally mandated deadline runs out in March.

  • January 28, 2026

    Nomura Unit Taps Legal Chief To Steer Crypto Trust Bank Plan

    A crypto-focused subsidiary of financial services group Nomura has applied to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to establish a national trust bank headed by its legal chief.

  • January 28, 2026

    Ropes & Gray Adds 3 Partners In New York

    Ropes & Gray LLP has expanded its offerings in New York with the addition of three attorneys, one each from Debevoise, Paul Weiss and Wachtell Lipton.

  • January 27, 2026

    ADM To Pay $40M To Resolve SEC Accounting Fraud Claims

    Archer-Daniels-Midland Co. has agreed to shell out $40 million to put to rest U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission allegations the company and several former executives committed accounting and disclosure fraud, according to announcements made Tuesday.

  • January 27, 2026

    Crypto Network Cofounder Hit With $100M RICO Suit

    The co-founder and board members of cryptocurrency-associated data cloud platform Cere Network were sued in California federal court Tuesday over an alleged pump-and-dump scheme where they secretly sold over $41 million in Cere tokens on various exchanges and misappropriated investor funds. 

Expert Analysis

  • Questions To Ask Your Client When Fraud Taints Financing

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    As elevated risk levels yield fertile conditions for fraud in financing transactions, asking corporate clients the right investigative questions can help create an action plan, bring parties together and help clients successfully survive any scam, says Mark Kirsons at Morgan Lewis.

  • 2nd Circ. Peloton Ruling Emphasizes Disclosure Context

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    The Second Circuit’s recent decision to revive shareholders’ suit alleging that Peloton made materially misleading statements makes clear that public companies must continually review risk disclosures to determine if previous hypotheticals have materialized, say attorneys at Baker Botts.

  • Series

    Mindfulness Meditation Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Mindful meditation enables me to drop the ego, and in helping me to keep sight of what’s important, permits me to learn from the other side and become a reliable counselor, says Roy Wyman at Bass Berry.

  • How Calif. High Court Is Rethinking Forum Selection Clauses

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    Two recent cases before the California Supreme Court show that the state is shifting toward greater enforcement of freely negotiated forum selection clauses between sophisticated parties, so litigators need to revisit old assumptions about the breadth of California's public policy exception, says Josh Patashnik at Perkins Coie.

  • AI Litigation Tools Can Enhance Case Assessment, Strategy

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    Civil litigators can use artificial intelligence tools to strengthen case assessment and aid in early strategy development, as long as they address the risks and ethical considerations that accompany these uses, say attorneys at Barnes & Thornburg.

  • Post-Genius Landscape Reveals Technical Stablecoin Hurdles

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    The Genius Act's implementation has revealed challenges for mass stablecoin adoption, but there are several factors that stablecoin issuers can use to differentiate themselves and secure market share, including interest rate, liquidity, and safety and security, say attorneys at Olshan Frome.

  • Attys Beware: Generative AI Can Also Hallucinate Metadata

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    In addition to the well-known problem of AI-generated hallucinations in legal documents, AI tools can also hallucinate metadata — threatening the integrity of discovery, the reliability of evidence and the ability to definitively identify the provenance of electronic documents, say attorneys at Law & Forensics.

  • How 9th Circ. Ruling Deepens SEC Disgorgement Circuit Split

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    The Ninth Circuit's recent decision in U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Sripetch creates opposing disgorgement rules in the two circuits where the SEC brings a large proportion of enforcement actions — the Second and Ninth — and increases the likelihood that the U.S. Supreme Court will step in, say attorneys at Cahill Gordon.

  • What May Be Ahead In Debanking Enforcement

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    President Donald Trump's executive order on politicized or unlawful debanking has spurred a flurry of activity by the federal banking regulators, so banks should expect debanking-related complaints submitted by consumers to increase, and for federal regulators to look for more enforcement opportunities, say attorneys at Bradley Arant.

  • SEC Crypto Custody Relief Offers Clarity For Funds

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    A recent U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission staff letter supplies a workable path for registered investment advisers and funds seeking to offer crypto custody services by using state trust companies, and may portend additional useful guidance regarding crypto custody, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • When Atty Ethics Violations Give Rise To Causes Of Action

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    Though the Model Rules of Professional Conduct make clear that a violation of the rules does not automatically create a cause of action, attorneys should beware of a few scenarios in which they could face lawsuits for ethical lapses, says Brian Faughnan at Faughnan Law.

  • A Shift To Semiannual Reporting May Reshape Litigation Risk

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    While the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's proposed change from quarterly to semiannual reporting may reduce the volume of formal filings, it wouldn't reduce litigation risk, instead shifting it into less predictable terrain — where informal disclosures, timing ambiguities and broader materiality debates will dominate, says Pavithra Kumar at Advanced Analytical Consulting Group.

  • How Novel Del. Ruling Tackled Crypto Jurisdiction

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    As courts grapple with cryptocurrency's borderless nature, the Delaware Court of Chancery's recent decision in Timoria v. Anis highlights the delicate balance between territorial jurisdiction and due process, and reinforces the need for practitioners to develop sophisticated, multijurisdictional approaches to digital asset disputes, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.

  • What CFTC Push For Tokenized Collateral Means For Crypto

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    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.

  • Lessons From Del. Chancery Court's New Activision Decision

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    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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