This past Friday night, San Joaquin Bank of Bakersfield, California became the 99th bank the FDIC closed this year (refer here) The growing wave of bank failures has been a troubling story all year, and one that unquestionably will get worse before it gets better. But now that the 100th bank failure
October 2009
A Single New Securities Lawsuit, Many Current Trends
It is always useful to look at aggregate securities lawsuit filing data to try to determine what trends and themes can be discerned, but occasionally it is also useful to look at a single new filing whether it might suggest anything. To choose one example, a closer look at a new securities class action lawsuit…
Advisen Releases Third Quarter Securities Litigation Report
Lawsuits alleging violations of the securities laws showed a strong comeback in the third quarter of 2009, according to an Advisen report released on October 14, 2009 (here). The report, the latest in a quarterly series from Advisen, reports that securities lawsuit filings were up "solidly" in the third quarter after a relative…
Vivendi Securities Trial: A Closer Look at the Opening Statements
Stanford Financial’s D&O Insurer Can Advance Individuals’ Defense Costs
Stanford Financial Group’s D&O insurer may advance the individual directors’ and officers’ defense expenses without violating the court’s receivership order, according to an October 9, 2009 ruling by Northern District of Texas Judge David Godbey. A copy of Judge Godbey’s ruling can be found here.
As detailed in a prior post (…
Subprime Lawsuit Against Mortgage Securitizer Dismissed
In the latest of the subprime and credit crisis cases to be dismissed, on September 30, 2009, District of Massachusetts Judge Richard G. Stearns dismissed the securities class action lawsuit that had been filed by purchasers of mortgage pass-through certificates against Nomura Asset Acceptance Corporation, certain of its directors and officers, the eight mortgage trusts…
Plaintiffs’ Extract Some Subprime Lawsuit Dismissal Motion Success
In several prior posts (most recently here), I have noted that defendants seem to be faring particularly well at the dismissal motion stage in the subprime and credit crisis-related lawsuits. However, in recent dismissal motion rulings in two subprime-related cases, one in a securities class action lawsuit and one in an ERISA class action…
Vivendi Securities Suit Goes to Trial
In a rare case in which a securities suit is actually going to trial, on Monday a jury was empanelled in the Vivendi securities class action lawsuit pending in the Southern District of New York. An October 5, 2009 New York Times article summarizing the background of the case can be found here. A…
Congressional Overhaul of Financial Regulation Launched, Securities Law Reforms Proposed
One consequence of the current economic crisis that has long seemed inevitable is some form of legislative overhaul of the financial regulatory system. This possibility may have taken one step toward realization with the October 1 release of a package of legislative proposals by Pennsylvania Democratic Congressman Paul E. Kanjorski, the Chairman of the…
Court Bars Insurers’ Bid to Rescind Milberg’s Insurance
On September 30, 2009, in a decision that will be widely discussed both because of the high profile figures involved as well as because of the outcome, Southern District of New York Judge Loretta A. Preska ruled (here) that the statute of limitations bars the action brought by the Milberg law firm’s professional…
As noted in a prior post (