On February 27, 2007, plaintiffs’ lawyers’ initiated a securities class action lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York against Swiss Reinsurance Company, the world’s largest reinsurance company, and certain of its directors and officers. A copy of the plaintiffs’ lawyers’ press release can be found here and
Subprime Litigation
Dismissal Motion Denied in Subprime Securities Lawsuit
In prior posts (here and here), I noted two subprime securities lawsuit rulings in which defendants’ motions to dismiss were granted with leave to amend. But in a January 4, 2008 order (here) in the Accredited Home subprime-related securities lawsuit pending in the United States District Court for the Central District of…
Awaiting Subprime Fallout Outside the Financial Sector
Doomsday estimates of subprime related write-downs of as much as $400 billion, at a time when current Wall Street losses are “only” around $120 billion, beg the question of where the rest of these losses are. Undoubtedly, some part of these as yet unannounced losses will be revealed in many financial institutions’ upcoming earnings releases, as…
Subprime Securities Class Action Lawsuit Filed against Mortgage Securitizers
The subprime meltdown has already provoked a wave of shareholder lawsuits (as detailed here), in which public company shareholders have alleged subprime-related misrepresentations or omissions that shareholders contend inflated the companies’ share price. But the plaintiffs in an unusual class action securities lawsuit recently filed in Massachusetts state court are not public company shareholders…
First-Filed Subprime Lawsuit Dismissed (Without Prejudice)
On February 7, 2007, New Century Financial Corp. became the first company to be named in subprime-related securities lawsuit. On January 31, 2008, just short of one year later, Judge Dean Pregerson of the United States District Court for the Central District of California, granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss, but without prejudice and…
Subprime Litigation Wave Hits Morgan Stanley
On February 12, 2008, a plaintiff initiated a securities class action lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Central District of California relating to Morgan Stanley’s subprime-related woes. The complaint (here) purports to be filed on behalf of a class of persons who purchased Morgan Stanley’s shares between July 10, 2007…
Auction Rate Securities: The Next Subprime Litigation Wave?
A developing breakdown in an obscure corner of the credit-market involving debt instruments called “auction rate securities” could represent the latest threat to emerge from the credit crisis. According to news reports (here and here), the absence of buyers for these securities has caused several recent auctions to fail, forced isuers …
Subprime Litigation Risk: Outside the Financial Sector?
As I have previously noted (here), securities backed by subprime and other residential mortgages are not just held by financial companies. A wide variety of companies invested in these securities in order to try to improve their return on cash and short-term investments. As the credit markets have deteriorated, many of these investments…
Expanded Subprime Litigation Wave Hits Sallie Mae
In a prior post (here), I noted that the subprime meltdown story is no longer just about subprime, and that the crisis spreading to other types of credit could stretch the subprime litigation wave to areas outside of subprime. The lawsuit filed today against SLM Corporation (better known as "Sallie Mae")…
French Investors Hit Soc Gen with Subprime-Related Lawsuit
As further details have emerged, Soci�t� G�n�rale’s account of how J�r�me Kerviel triggered billions of dollars in losses has come under scrutiny, as reported on the January 29, 2009 Wall Street Journal (here). But questions are also being raised about trades in SG shares by SG director Robert Day and foundations he controls…