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Capital Markets
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February 10, 2025
FTX Having Trouble Serving Binance With Ch. 11 Lawsuit
The estate of fallen cryptocurrency exchange FTX told a Delaware bankruptcy judge late Friday that its attorneys haven't yet been able to serve Binance and its former CEO Changpeng Zhao a lawsuit seeking to recover nearly $1.8 billion that FTX is accused of illegally transferring prior to its collapse two years ago.
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February 10, 2025
AI Copyright Plaintiffs Say Google Is Raising 'Marginal issues'
Artists and authors suing over how Google trains its artificial intelligence software say that the tech giant is disputing "marginal issues" that other tech giants facing similar copyright lawsuits over similar technology haven't brought up.
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February 10, 2025
Merrill Lynch Objects To New Discovery Bid In Stock Loan Suit
Merrill Lynch told a New York federal court it should deny investors' request for supplemental transaction data in their suit alleging major banks colluded to avoid modernizing the stock loan market, arguing that the discovery period has closed, and there are no legitimate reasons to grant the "burdensome" request.
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February 10, 2025
Feds Nab Plea In Bitcoin-Boosting Hack Of SEC X Account
An Alabama man on Monday pled guilty to being involved with the hack of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's X account last year, admitting to a single conspiracy charge and agreeing to forfeit $50,000 he made from the scheme that briefly bumped the price of bitcoin.
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February 10, 2025
FDIC's McKernan Exits Board As Republicans Max Out Seats
Republican Jonathan McKernan announced Monday that he'll vacate his seat on the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s board, given the expiry of his term and the addition of a Trump appointee that brings the board to its maximum number of GOP-held seats.
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February 10, 2025
Grayscale Beats Bitcoin Rival's $2M Unfair Practices Suit
A Connecticut state court judge has handed digital asset management firm Grayscale Investments LLC a summary judgment win on a smaller rival's $2 million unfair trade practices suit over a bitcoin feud, finding that the relevant state law does not apply to the dispute.
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February 10, 2025
SEC Grants Short-Selling Disclosure Reprieve, CAT Relief
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is providing a temporary exemption in order to allow investment managers more time to comply with new rules requiring increased disclosure on short selling, and separately said it will no longer require certain personally identifiable information to be reported to the market database known as the Consolidated Audit Trail.
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February 10, 2025
Simpson Thacher Brings On Registered Funds Partner In NY
Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP has hired a New York-based partner in its registered funds practice to focus on real estate and capital markets, the firm said Monday.
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February 10, 2025
9th Circ. Tosses Slack Investor Suit After High Court Battle
The Ninth Circuit on Monday released Slack Technologies Inc. from an investor dispute that was previously ruled on by the U.S. Supreme Court, with the circuit court going a step further than the high court in ruling that none of the suing investors' claims were salvageable due to the unique way that Slack went public.
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February 07, 2025
Chancery Tosses $3.4B Hertz Stock Warrant Redemption Suit
Delaware's Court of Chancery dismissed a suit Friday filed by two Hertz institutional investors accusing the company of relying on an impermissible reinterpretation of a warrant agreement to reject a redemption demand purportedly triggered by the company's post-Chapter 11 recapitalization, finding the plaintiffs' interpretation of the agreement leads to "absurd results."
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February 07, 2025
NJ Statehouse Catch-Up: Offshore Wind, AI, Neurodiversity
The retraction of New Jersey's fourth offshore wind solicitation came alongside a wave of legislative and regulatory activity that also proposed workplace rules to bolster inclusivity and a new compensation path for assault victims
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February 07, 2025
Maxeon Investors Push To Keep Exchange Act Suit Alive
The lead plaintiff in a proposed class action against Maxeon Solar Technologies Ltd. urged a California federal judge to reject the company's bid to escape the suit as well as its "fanciful" explanations for a two-day stock plunge that harmed shareholders.
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February 07, 2025
SPAC Market Hums Again Following Multiyear Downturn
Special purpose acquisition companies are once again asserting their presence in the capital markets and M&A landscape, forming new vehicles at the highest pace in three years — albeit in leaner form than in the last cycle, when many deals ended in busts.
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February 07, 2025
SafeMoon CEO Says Crypto Policy Shifts Warrant Trial Delay
The crypto executive behind the alleged SafeMoon fraud is fighting to delay his trial by a month in the hopes that a new approach to cryptocurrency by the Trump administration could ax the securities fraud charge from the counts against him.
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February 07, 2025
Coinbase Can't Yet Escape Class Claims Over Crypto Sales
Coinbase users can move forward with class claims that the cryptocurrency firm operated as an unregistered securities exchange after a New York federal judge ruled Friday that the Second Circuit prevented him from shuttering the case without first determining whether Coinbase was the seller of the tokens trading on its platform.
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February 07, 2025
Ex-Broker Seeks Court Win In Bid To Dismantle FINRA
A former stockbroker who is fighting a lifetime industry ban has urged a North Carolina federal judge to grant him a win in his suit attempting to unravel the power of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, saying the organization is unconstitutionally structured because it deprives him of his right to a jury trial and due process, among other things.
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February 07, 2025
Wealth Firm Latest To Be Sued Over Cash Sweep Program
Wealth management firm Osaic is the latest financial institution to face proposed class action claims over its alleged "dramatic underpayment" of interest to customers participating in its cash sweeps programs.
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February 07, 2025
Off The Bench: Trump Bans Trans Athletes, NCAA Falls In Line
In this week's Off The Bench, the NCAA changes course to accommodate a presidential ban on transgender women athletes, Shohei Ohtani's former interpreter is sentenced for his gambling-driven embezzlement, and women's soccer players get restitution for abuse at the hands of their coaches and teams.
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February 07, 2025
Taxation With Representation: Kirkland, Latham, Skadden
In this week's Taxation With Representation, Triumph Group goes private via Berkshire Partners and Warburg Pincus affiliates, alternative asset manager TPG buys Altus Power, Globus Medical buys Nevro Corp., and Honeywell separates its automation and aerospace technology businesses, resulting in the formation of three distinct companies.
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February 07, 2025
4 Firms Steer Cement Maker Titan America's $384M IPO
Shares for the U.S. business of worldwide cement producer Titan Cement International SA debuted Friday after the company priced a $384 million initial public offering within its range, guided by four law firms spanning international borders.
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February 06, 2025
Goodwin, Ropes Lead Cystic Fibrosis Co.'s Upsized $191M IPO
Cystic fibrosis-focused drug developer Sionna Therapeutics Inc. on Thursday priced an upsized $191 million initial public offering at the top of its range, represented by Goodwin Procter LLP and underwriters counsel Ropes & Gray LLP.
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February 06, 2025
SEC Assistant Chief Litigation Counsel Joins Carlton Fields
An assistant chief litigation counsel for the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has left the agency to join Carlton Fields as a shareholder in the firm's securities litigation and enforcement practice in Washington, D.C., the firm announced Thursday.
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February 06, 2025
House GOP Floats Stablecoin Bill Amid Debanking Buzz
House Financial Services lawmakers unveiled a discussion draft of a bill to regulate stablecoins Thursday evening, joining a separate effort introduced in the U.S. Senate earlier this week.
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February 06, 2025
4th Circ. Sides With Credit Rater In Developers' Libel Lawsuit
A group of developers won't get a second shot at their libel suit alleging credit rating firm Dun & Bradstreet published misleading credit reports about them after the Fourth Circuit said they failed to show the statements in those reports were defamatory.
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February 06, 2025
Meta Eyes Texas Skies, Another Crypto IPO, And More Rumors
Facebook owner Meta Platforms Inc. is considering relocating its legal residence to Texas, while cryptocurrency exchange Bullish is moving forward on an initial public offering, and Unilever PLC is eyeing New York as a listing destination for its ice cream business.
Expert Analysis
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A Look At Collateralized Loan Obligations Post-Reform
The Financial Stability Board's recent report on global securitization reforms, analyzing resilience trends in the collateralized loan obligation market post-2008, suggests that, while risk retention rules have a limited impact on observable characteristics, other structural features play a significant role in ensuring risk alignment, says Kos Vavelidis at DLA Piper.
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Lights, Camera, Ethics? TV Lawyers Tend To Set Bad Example
Though fictional movies and television shows portraying lawyers are fun to watch, Hollywood’s inaccurate depictions of legal ethics can desensitize attorneys to ethics violations and lead real-life clients to believe that good lawyers take a scorched-earth approach, says Nancy Rapoport at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
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SEC Motion Response Could Reveal New Crypto Approach
Cumberland DRW recently filed to dismiss the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s enforcement action against it for the unlawful purchase and sale of digital asset securities, and the agency's response should unveil whether, and to what extent, the Trump administration will relax the federal government’s stance on digital asset regulation, say attorneys at O'Melveny.
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3 Ways Trump Can Nix SEC's Climate Disclosure Rules
Given President Donald Trump's campaign statements and agency appointments, it's likely that his administration will try to annul the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's climate disclosure rules, but his options for doing so present unique opportunities and challenges, with varying levels of permanence and impact, say attorneys at DLA Piper.
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Perspectives
Accountant-Owned Law Firms Could Blur Ethical Lines
KPMG’s recent application to open a legal practice in Arizona represents the first overture by an accounting firm to take advantage of the state’s relaxed law firm ownership rules, but enforcing and supervising the practice of law by nonattorneys could prove particularly challenging, says Seth Laver at Goldberg Segalla.
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Expect Scrutiny Of Banks To Persist, Even Under Trump
Although the change in administrations brings some measure of uncertainty as to the nature of bank compliance oversight, if regulators in Washington, D.C., attempt to dilute the vigilance of federal superintendence, the states are waiting in the wings to fill the void, say attorneys at Polsinelli.
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AI Will Soon Transform The E-Discovery Industrial Complex
Todd Itami at Covington discusses how generative artificial intelligence will reshape the current e-discovery paradigm, replacing the blunt instrument of data handling with a laser scalpel of fully integrated enterprise solutions — after first making e-discovery processes technically and legally harder.
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When Innovation Overwhelms The Rule Of Law
In an era where technology is rapidly evolving and artificial intelligence is seemingly everywhere, it’s worth asking if the law — both substantive precedent and procedural rules — can keep up with the light speed of innovation, says Reuben Guttman at Guttman Buschner.
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The Risk And Reward Of Federal Approach To AI Regulation
The government has struggled to keep up with artificial intelligence's furious pace, but while an overbroad federal attempt to adopt a more unified approach to regulating AI poses its own risks, so does the current environment of regulatory uncertainty, say attorneys at Covington.
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How Cos. Can Prepare Now For SEC E-Filing System Changes
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's amendments to the Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis and Retrieval system are designed to improve access to and management of EDGAR accounts, and with the March 24 effective date fast approaching, and the transition requiring significant coordination, companies should begin planning now, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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The Tides Are Changing For Fair Access Banking Laws
The landscape of fair access banking laws, which seek to prevent banks from denying services based on individuals' ideological beliefs, has shifted in the last few years, but a new presidential administration provides renewed momentum for advancing such legislation against the backdrop of state efforts, say attorneys at Latham.
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Imagine The Possibilities Of Openly Autistic Lawyering
Andi Mazingo at Lumen Law, who was diagnosed with autism about midway through her career, discusses how the legal profession can create inclusive workplaces that empower openly autistic lawyers and enhance innovation, and how neurodivergent attorneys can navigate the challenges and opportunities that come with disclosing one’s diagnosis.
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Kiromic SEC Order Shows Importance Of Self-Reporting
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recently filed settled charges against Kiromic BioPharma illustrate the critical intersection between U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulatory processes and investor disclosures under the securities laws, and showcase how responding promptly to internal whistleblower reports may reap benefits, say attorneys at Arnold & Porter.
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Series
Documentary Filmmaking Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Becoming a documentary filmmaker has allowed me to merge my legal expertise with my passion for storytelling, and has helped me to hone negotiation, critical thinking and problem-solving skills that are important to both endeavors, says Robert Darwell at Sheppard Mullin.
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Litigation Funding Disclosure Debate: Strategy Considerations
In the ongoing debate over whether courts should require disclosure of litigation funding, funders and plaintiffs tend to argue against such mandates, but voluntarily disclosing limited details about a funding arrangement can actually confer certain benefits to plaintiffs in some scenarios, say Andrew Stulce and Marc Cavan at Longford Capital.