In one of the largest subprime-related securities lawsuit settlements so far, Moneygram Corporation has agreed to settle its subprime-related securities class action and accompanying derivative suit for $80 million, according to the company’s February 25, 2010 press release (here).
Background
As reported here, the MoneyGram case represented the distinct group of
As of year-end 2009, the FDIC identified 702 banks as "problem institutions," representing about 9% of all institutions reporting to the FDIC and the highest number of problem banks since 1993, according to the FDIC’s latest banking report.
In an interesting and potentially significant February 22, 2010 opinion (
Just when it seemed as if the dismissal motion rulings in the subprime-related securities suits
As the number of failed banks has surged over the past couple of years, one anticipated byproduct has been a corresponding wave of litigation against the failed institutions’ former directors and officers. The thing is,
After an initial flurry of bank failures in January, the pace of bank closures more recently has slowed. There has been only one failed bank so far in February, and there were none at all this past Friday night, the first failure-free Friday in several weeks. The apparent bank closure slowdown does not, however, mean
In an interesting February 11, 2010 decision (
One of the most distinctive attributes of the 2009 securities class action lawsuit filings was the prevalence, particularly in the second half of the year, of new lawsuits in which the filing date came well after the date of the proposed class period cutoff. There has been
In a flurry of headline-grabbing events involving Bank of America last Thursday, the