In what is as far as I am aware the first class action settlement in the current wave of subprime-related securities lawsuits, on October 14, 2008, WSB Financial Group announced (here) that it had entered into a settlement agreement of the class action lawsuit pending against the company and certain of its directors
Subprime Litigation
A New Era of “Dead Bank” Litigation?
After the close of business on Friday, October 10, 2008, the FDIC announced (here and here) that state regulators had closed two banks, Meridian Bank of Eldred, Illinois, and Main Street Bank of Northville, Michigan. The closure of these two banks brings the 2008 total number of bank closures to 15.
By…
Countrywide Delaware Derivative Lawsuit Dismissed; What Happens Next?
On October 7, 2008, in a decision that could affect other litigation relation to Countrywide Financial, Judge Sue Robinson dismissed the consolidated shareholders’ derivative lawsuit pending in Delaware federal court against the company, as nominal defendants, and ten of its former directors and officers. A copy of the October 7 opinion can be found here…
Companies Collapse, Preferred Shareholders Sue
The full consequences of the dramatic recent events in the financial markets may take years to emerge, but one direct effect has already appeared – the collapse of several large financial institutions has turned preferred shareholders into securities class action plaintiffs.
Historically, securities class action lawsuits have been pursued on behalf of common shareholders…
Upstreaming Subprime Losses
According to news reports (here), MBIA has filed a lawsuit breach of contract lawsuit in New York state court against Countrywide Financial Corp. (now part of Bank of America) alleging that Countywide made fraudulent misrepresentations about is loan underwriting standards in connection with the securitization of over $14 billion of securities for which…
More Damn Things to Worry About
The stock market, that omnipresent and all-purpose barometer of all human sentiment and endeavor, was back up today. So, everything’s fine, right? Congress will get back to work, pass the bailout bill (of course, we all knew we really needed it all along, it was just an election year test, you see) and then we…
Does Dismissal Foreshadow Subprime Litigation Culmination?
Allegations that the defendant companies and their senior managers failed to disclose the hazards associated with the company’s risky investments. Allegations that management failed to account for losses on high risk investments in a timely or complete manner. Allegations that company management minimized the deteriorating values of high risk investments in piecemeal damage control statements…
WaMu: A Thrift Falls in the Forest
Amidst all of the tumult over the Fed bailout and the Presidential debates, not to mention a host of other events large and small, news about WaMu’s collapse has already slipped from the front pages of the nation’s newspapers. Astonishingly, in one short weekend, events have superseded the largest bank failure in U.S. history.
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Another “New Wave” Credit Crisis Lawsuit
In my preceding post, I wrote about a possible new wave of credit crisis lawsuits, where the defendant companies are not themselves directly affected by credit crisis fallout, but instead suffer from exposure to other companies that have been directly affected. In a litigation example of these circumstances at work, plaintiffs’ lawyers today initiated another…
Litigation Wave Inflection Point?
The economic crisis that began as the subprime meltdown has clearly entered a dark new phase. And just as the prior stages of the crisis generated waves of related litigation, this new phase already has produced its own distinctive round of lawsuits. Like the underlying economic circumstances, the new litigation phase also seems darker and…