In the first securities class action jury verdict to arise out the credit crisis, on Thursday November 18, 2010, the jury in the BankAtlantic securities lawsuit in federal court in Miami returned a verdict in the plaintiffs’ favor, finding seven of the statements at issue to have been false, and awarding damages of $2.41 per
Securities Litigation
Does D&O Insurance Undermine the Deterrence Effect of Securities Litigation?

All too often, the securities class action litigation process seems like a complicated and costly mechanism for transferring large amounts of money to the lawyers involved but only small amounts to the aggrieved investors, all at the expense of the D&O insurers. It is hard not to wonder sometimes what the whole process accomplishes, other…
A Securities Litigation Stalwart Takes a Loss
Although the world of electoral politics may seem distant from the directors’ and officers’ liability arena, there was one development in Tuesday’s elections that potentially could affect the D&O claims environment, and it happened right here in The D&O Diary’s home state of Ohio. It has not drawn much national attention, but Ohio’s activist Attorney…
The Dodd-Frank Whistleblower Provisions: Some Other Things to Worry About
Among the many innovations introduced in the massive Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act enacted this past July are the new whistleblower provisions, designed to encourage employees and others to report securities law violations to the SEC. The bounty award provided for in the whistleblower provisions seem likely to encourage fraud reporting, but…
Advisen Releases 3Q10 Corporate and Securities Litigation Report
Overall levels of corporate and securities litigation remained at elevated levels in the most recent quarter even as securities class action filing levels remained flat, according to the third quarter 2010 report of the insurance information firm, Advisen. The October 2010 report can be found here.
Preliminary Notes
The litigation analyzed in the…
Swiss Re Subprime Securities Suit Dismissed Based on Morrison
Yet another securities class action lawsuit against a non-U.S. company has been dismissed based on the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Morrison v. National Bank of Australia. In a decision that specifically addresses many of the questions that have been discussed in the wake of Morrison, Southern District of New York Judge John Koeltl…
3Q10 Securities Class Action Filings Remain Below Historical Averages
New securities class action lawsuit filings in the third quarter of 2010 remained below longer term historical averages, although consistent with filing levels in more recent quarters. There were 39 new securities class action lawsuits filed in the third quarter, bringing the 2010 YTD total number of new filings to 125, as of September 30…
When is a Securities Suit Stale?
When the U.S. Supreme Court issued its ruling earlier this year in the Merck case pertaining to the question of what triggers the running of the statute of limitations in securities cases, there was some speculation that the decision might encourage an influx of cases involving events from the distant past. There really have not…
Morrison Precludes Claims Based on Non-U.S. Purchased Shares, Even if Company Shares “Listed” in U.S.
On September 14, 2010, in another ruling that the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Morrison v. National Australia Bank precludes claim by "f-squared" claimants – that is, U.S. residents who purchased shares of a Non-U.S. company on a foreign exchange – Southern District of New York Judge Victor Marrero dismissed the claims of investors who…
Another Loan Loss Reserve Disclosure Case Dismissal
In the latest ruling to address the pleading adequacy of a securities suit based on a financial institution’s loan loss reserve disclosures, a federal judge has found that the plaintiffs’ allegations in the SunTrust Trust Preferred Securities lawsuit were not sufficient to state a claim under the securities laws. Northern District of Georgia Judge William…