The heightened pace of securities lawsuit filings in 2008 (as previously noted here) continued in April, when there were 22 new securities class action filings. The subprime litigation wave was a significant factor in the filing activity level, as ten of the 22 cases were subprime or credit crisis related. Of the 10 subprime
Kevin LaCroix
Kevin M. LaCroix is an attorney and Executive Vice President, RT ProExec, a division of RT Specialty. RT ProExec is an insurance intermediary focused exclusively on management liability issues.
Buffett, in His Own Words
In May 2003, I was fortunate enough to to attend the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting in Omaha, Nebraska. (Full disclosure: I attended the meeting because I was then and remain now a Berkshire shareholder.) While at the meeting I struck up a conversation with some other attendees, who turned out to be a group of…
So What About Auditor Liability Caps?
One of the recurring suggestions in would-be reformers’ standard litany of proposed changes for litigation relief is the introduction of auditor liability caps. For example, the Committee on Capital Markets Regulation interim report (about which refer here) proposed the “elimination or reduction of gatekeeper litigation, either through a cap on auditor liability or creation of…
Uh-Oh! Serious Options Backdating Settlement Problems
As reflected in my running tally of options backdating lawsuit settlements (which can be accessed here), a number of the options backdating-related derivative lawsuits have settled for some combination of an agreement to pay the plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees, some adjustment to the company officials’ options grants, and the company’s adoption of corporate governance reforms.
Auction Rate Preferred Securities: What’s Next in Subprime Litigation
Next up as targets in the ever-growing wave of subprime-related class action lawsuits are closed-end funds that issued auction preferred securities. The auction marketplace for these securities, like the market for auction rate municipal bonds, has broken down, and investors who bought the securities are now suing the closed end funds that issued the instruments.…
Class Action Opt-Outs: The Impact of Competition on Securities Lawsuit Resolution
I have previously noted (most recently here) the increasing significance of opt-out actions as a part of securities lawsuit resolution. Columbia Law School Professor John Coffee, in a March 27, 2008 paper entitled “Accountability and Competition in Securities Class Actions: Why ‘Exit’ Works Better Than ‘Voice’” (here) examines the opt-out phenomenon…
First Circuit, Applying Tellabs, Reverses Securities Case Dismissal
When the United States Supreme Court issued its June 21, 2007 opinion in the Tellabs case, media commentators generally viewed it as a defense victory. My own view (expressed here), was that the decision represented more of a draw, and that the practical impact would vary from Circuit to Circuit. The suggestion that Tellabs…
Credit Crisis Lawsuits Spread
Add corporate debt to the type of lending caught up in the current credit crisis, and add both commercial real estate financing companies and private equity firms (or at least one that recently completed a high profile public offering) to the kinds of companies now ensnared in the current wave of lawsuits. The latest round of…
“Subprime” Litigation? More Like “Credit Crisis” Litigation
A lawsuit filed late last week against First Marblehead Corporation underscores that the current lawsuit onslaught so often referred to as the “subprime” litigation wave is, and really has been for awhile, about so much more than just subprime. Although we are probably stuck with the “subprime” label as a shorthand way to describe these…
Fiduciary Liability: Seventh Circuit Upholds Arthur Anderson’s Insurer’s Coverage Denial
In an April 9, 2008 opinion (here) written by Chief Judge Frank Easterbrook, the Seventh Circuit held that there was no coverage under Arthur Anderson’s fiduciary liability policy for the firm’s settlement of a retiree pension benefits dispute.
The dispute arose after the firm’s Enron-related difficulties undercut the firm’s ability to honor…