Investors whose fortunes were tied to Bernard Madoff and his firm have already been counting (and mourning) their losses. But for the insurers that provided coverage for financial firms targeted in the Madoff-related litigation, the losses have only just begun to accumulate.

 

How high the insurance losses ultimately may run remains to be seen, but early estimates suggest that that the insurance losses, even just for defense expenses, could be significant.

 

A January 9, 2008 Bloomberg article (here) reports that Madoff-related claims "may cost insurers who cover financial institutions more than $1 billion as they pay legal costs for investment managers who gave client money to Madoff." Indeed one respected industry participant is quoted as saying that a total of $1 billion "feels a little low to me."
 

 

The losses could well affect not only D&O insurers, but also insurers offering"error and omissions" E&O insurance. For many of the kinds of investment firms involved in these cases so far, the type of insurance protection they would most likely purchase provides both coverages within a single package.

 

The article correctly points out that how large the insurance losses ultimately turn out to be depends on how many of the Madoff "feeder funds" and other litigation targets actually have purchased these kinds of insurance. As one observer quoted in the article notes, hedge funds and other investment vehicles "often don’t buy coverage."

 

There are a variety of other factors that also could affect the total cost to insurers of the Madoff-related claims. The first is the question of who is insured under the policies. In many of these Madoff-related lawsuits (a complete list of which can be accessed here), the plaintiffs have named a laundry list of related defendants, often including not only investment managers and advisors, but also investment funds, offshore entities, and a squadron of associated individuals.

 

These claims are going to stress-test the insurance policies involved. The policyholders will find out how well put together the policies were, in light of the entities’ related structures and operations. There may well be instances where the entire family of advisors, managers and funds were not fully yoked together under the coverage umbrella.

 

But an even more important set of issues that potentially could affect the scope of insurance losses are the potential coverage defenses the carriers may seek to assert. In particular, insurers will be looking closely to see whether the allegations raised in these lawsuits trigger one of more of the standard conduct exclusions, particularly the personal profit and the fraud exclusions.

 

The conduct exclusions typically are written on an after adjudication basis, meaning that the only apply to preclude coverage only after an adjudicated determination that the prohibited conduct actually took place (as I recently noted in my discussion of the potential coverage insurance issues arising in connection with the Satyam scandal, here).

 

Moreover, at this point the fraud involved appears to involve misconduct of Madoff himself, rather than the feeder funds, although obviously investigators are probing the potential complicity of a wide variety and number of persons associated with Madoff.

 

The personal profit exclusion may prove to be the more relevant. A typical exclusion precludes coverage for loss "based upon, arising from, or in consequence of … an Insured having gained any profit, remuneration or advantage to which such Insured as not legally entitled, if a judgment or final adjudication in any proceeding establishes the gaining of such remuneration or advantage."

 

Investors have already claimed that the feeder funds inappropriately exacted management fees or other compensation without conducting appropriate due diligence or otherwise earning their fees. However, an adjudicated determination of these allegations would be required for the profit exclusion to preclude coverage.

 

Although there is currently no reported reason to suggest that the "feeder funds" were aware of Madoff’s scheme, insurers will also be looking closely at who know what and when, looking for possible bases to rescind coverage based on alleged misrepresentations in the policy application.

 

Yet another factor that could restrict the total insurance losses is the limitation on the amount of insurance potentially involved. In my experience, many investment advisory firms and hedge funds buy relatively lower limits of insurance coverage. Thus, in many cases, the available insurance involved could be relatively slight and could quickly be exhausted by defense costs alone. As a result, a portion of the potential defense expense and the amount of some settlements could wind up being uninsured.

 

I suspect that as a result of the Madoff-related events, many investment advisory firms, hedge funds and other financial firms will now need far less persuading of the value of this type of insurance or that more than just minimal limits could well be advised. Unfortunately, for the firms acquiring this insight for the first time now, this type of coverage could well become much more expensive even if otherwise available.

 

As noted in a December 31, 2008 publication of the Lloyd’s insurance market entitled "Madoff Scandal Poses Challenges for Directors" (here), the "sheer scale of the fallout from Madoff could seriously affect the financial insurance market’s dynamics, affecting the availability and cost of both professional indemnity and directors and officers coverage." The article quotes one source as stating with respect to this type of coverage that "prices are going to increase and cover will be restricted."

 

More Madoff Lawsuits: Meanwhile, the Madoff-related lawsuits continue to flood in. For example, on January 8, 2009, Pacific West Health Medical Center, Inc. Employees Retirement Trust sued Fairfield Greenwich Group and related entities and individuals in the Southern District of New York on behalf of all persons who purchased shares of the Fairfield Sentry funds, alleging that the defendants breached their fiduciary duties. The defendants are also accused of negligence, unjust enrichment and breach of contract.

 

A copy of the Pacific West complaint can be found here. A copy of a January 9, 2009 Bloomberg article describing the complaint can be found here.

 

It also looks as if overseas investors are about to get involved in Madoff litigation, which may be unsurprising give that, as the Financial Times reports (here), as much as half of the Madoff losses have been borne by non-U.S. investors.

 

According to a January 8, 2009 Reuters story (here), investment activist group Deminor is readying to sue UBS, HSBC, Hyposwiss and others in courts in Luxembourg and Ireland in connection with the Madoff scandal. The charge is that the defendant banks acts as depositories for sponsored funds that invested clients’ money in Madoff-related vehicles. The allegation is that the depository banks were responsible for the sponsored funds and negligently failed to check what was inside the clients’ portfolios.

 

According to an earlier Financial Times article (here), UBS at least sought to exculpate itself from any responsibility for clients’ assets through the subscription documents it used.

 

In any event, I have updated my running tally of the Madoff-related litigation, which can be accessed here.

 

Special thanks to David Demurjian for the link to the Bloomberg article, and to a loyal reader who prefers anonymity for the Reuters and Financial Times articles.

 

Can Madoff Losses Be Recovered?: In addition to all of the factors noted above that could diminish the aggregate Madoff-related insurance losses, there is also the question whether the investors’ claims are meritorious. That is, do the claimants actually have a legitimate basis upon which to try to recover their losses from the Madoff "feeder funds" and others?

 

These questions will be addressed in a webinar entitled "Madoff Litigation: Can the Lost Billions Be Recovered?" to be hosted by Securities Docket on January 14, 2009 at 2:00 P.M. The speakers include Gerald Silk of the Bernstein Litowitz firm, Brad Friedman of Milberg LLP, and Fred Dunbar of NERA Economic Consulting. Further background regarding the webinar can be found here. Registration for the webinar can be accessed here.

 

A replay of a prior Securities Docket webinar entitled "2008: A Year in Review" can be accessed here. (I was one of the speakers at this prior session.)

 

"Hitler Previews the Cubs’ Winter Meeting": This video is in questionable taste, contains foul language, and is very very funny, at least for those having some acquaintance with the Chicago Cubs. (The humor is more accessible if, for example, you know who Kerry Wood is.) Special thanks to a loyal reader for sending along a link to this video.

 

https://youtube.com/watch?v=Rs7OagOu8ok%26hl%3Den%26fs%3D1

Seventh Circuit Weighs In on State Court ’33 Act Jurisdiction and Removal: A January 5, 2009 Seventh Circuit decision in the Katz v. Gerardi case (here) may make it more difficult for plaintiffs to pursue ’33 Act litigation in state court, at least in the Seventh Circuit — and possibly elsewhere, too.

 

As I detailed in a recent post (here), plaintiffs’ lawyers have proven keenly interested in pursing subprime and credit crisis-related litigation in state court, apparently for forum shopping type reasons. Defendants generally have sought to remove these cases to federal court, relying, among other things on the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 (CAFA) and the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998 (SLUSA).

 

However, this past summer, the Ninth Circuit held in the Luther v. Countrywide case that the nonremoval provision in Section 22 of the ’33 Act (which provides concurrent state and federal court jurisdiction for ’33 Act cases) effectively trumps the more recently enacted SLUSA and CAFA because it more specifically relates to securities lawsuits. My discussion of the Luther v. Countrywide case can be found here.

 

An October decision in the Second Circuit in the New Jersey Carpenters’ Fund v. Harborview Mortgage case had refused to remand to state court a ’33 Act case, as is more fully discussed on the 10b-5 Daily blog (here). The Harborview decision was primarily based on the fact that the underlying securities lawsuit did not involve "covered securities" for which SLUSA created an explicit removal exception; because the exception did not apply, the case could appropriately be removed to federal court notwithstanding the nonremoval provision in Section 22.

 

In the recent Seventh Circuit opinion, Judge Frank Easterbrook wrote that the provisions of the more recently enacted statutes, particularly CAFA, trump Section 22. Judge Easterbrook expressly rejected Luther v. Countrywide’s conclusion that the more specific securities statute prevailed. However, Judge Easterbrook’s opinion, like the Second Circuit opinion in Harborview, also depended in part on the fact that the investment instruments involved are not "covered securities" (i.e., do not trade on a national exchange), and therefore did not come within one of CAFA’s removal exceptions.

 

In addition, Judge Easterbrook’s opinion does seem to have been influenced significantly by the fact that the plaintiff in the case was really a seller of the investments involved, rather than a buyer, and therefore lacked a legal basis to assert a ’33 Act claim. Although the opinion nevertheless examined the removal/jurisdictional issues as if the plaintiff had a legal right to assert the claim, the opinion’s starting point arguably influenced the outcome of its analysis.

 

In any event, the Seventh Circuit’s recent opinion, together with the Second Circuit’s Harborview opinion, clearly could create substantial jurisdictional hurdles (at least outside the Ninth Circuit) for the numerous plaintiffs now seeking to pursue ’33 Act claims in state court. Many (if not all) of the various subprime and credit crisis-related cases filed in state court related to investment instruments that are not traded on national exchanges and therefore are not "covered securities." Accordingly, contrary to the title of one of my prior posts, Section 11 cases may not be "coming soon to a state court near you" after all.

 

A January 12, 2009 Law.com article discussing the Seventh Circuit opinion can be found here.

 

Collins & Aikman Defendants Criminal Charges Dropped: On January 9, 2009, prosecutors dropped securities fraud and other criminal charges against former Collins & Aikman CEO David Stockman and three others. As reported in the January 10, 2009 Wall Street Journal (here), the U.S. Attorney’s office said further prosecution "wouldn’t be in the ‘interests of justice’ following a renewed assessment of the case."

 

While the individuals involved undoubtedly are relieved to have the prosecutorial threat removed, the government’s action comes only after the now-defunct company’s directors and officers insurance was entirely exhausted by defense fees, as I discussed at length in a prior post (here). Unfortunately for these individuals, they continue to face SEC enforcement proceedings as well as civil litigation (about which refer here), now without any further insurance available to fund their defense in these proceedings, not to mention any settlements or judgments that may follow.

 

A criminal prosecution has such an enormous potential to cause harm. On the one hand, it is commendable that the government was willing to reassess the case and to drop it before any further harm was done. On the other hand, even though the prosecution is over, it has done material damage to the individuals who were unfortunate to be subject to a prosecution that lacked an adequate basis. It is extremely regrettable when the government uses its enormous power when it is unwarranted. In this instance the government can drop the case and walk away without so much as an apology, but the unfortunate consequences of an unjustified prosecution continue for the individuals involved.

 

University of Denver law professor Jay Brown has extensively covered the Collins & Aikman criminal prosecution on the Race to the Bottom blog (here), including in particular his discussion (here) of how the criminal prosecution exhausted the company’s D&O insurance. The SEC Actions blog has a good summary description (here) of the criminal case and raises the question whether the SEC will proceed with the civil enforcement proceeding in light of the discontinuance of the criminal case. All of the key pleadings in the criminal case can be found on the University of Denver Law School’s corporate governance website, here.

 

2008 Delaware Case Law in Review: Francis Pileggi of the Delaware Corporate and Commercial Litigation Blog has released the2008 installment of his annual review of key Delaware opinions. Pileggi’s report, which is must reading for anyone who wants an overview of important legal developments in Delaware’s court’s during 2008, is entitled "Selected Key Corporate and Commercial Delaware Decisions in 2008" and can be accessed here.

 

As the details about the Satyam Computer Services scandal have emerged and the U.S. securities lawsuits have begun to flood in, questions have also arisen about Satyam’s D&O insurance. At least some of the questions are answered in a January 8, 2009 article in The Economic Times (India’s largest financial daily) entitled "Satyam Scam Triggers Biggest D&O Claim" (here).

 

According to the article, Satyam carries a $75 million D&O insurance program led by Tata AIG, which is a joint venture of Tata Group and American International Group. The article also states that the Satyam claim "could trigger one of the largest Directors and Officers insurance claims in India."

 

Of course, knowing the limits of liability under Satyam’s insurance program does not necessarily tell you how much insurance ultimately will be available to defend and indemnify Satyam and its directors and officers. In a case where the company’s Chairman has publicly admitted fraud, the applicable terms and conditions will be absolutely critical. I discuss below a couple of issues that seem likely to arise.

 

The Fraud Exclusion

Without knowing more about the specific terms applicable under Satyam’s D&O insurance program, it is difficult to say anything with certainty. However, at least in the U.S., D&O insurance policies do not cover fraudulent, criminal or intentional misconduct.

 

But, again in the U.S., these exclusions typically do not kick in until there has been an "adjudication." Even though Satyam’s Chairman has admitted cooking the books, he has not (yet) been convicted of anything, so to the extent the policy’s exclusions have an "adjudication" requirement, the exclusions would not apply, at least in the interim.

 

Moreover, a well-constructed U.S. policy would also contain a "severability of exclusions" provision so that even if an exclusion would apply to preclude coverage based on the Chairman’s misconduct, it would not apply to others who were uninvolved in the conduct. Of course, many questions are now being asked about who else at Satyam might have been involved in the fraudulent accounting. The Chairman’s letter sought to establish that other board members were unaware of the fraud.

 

A prior post discussing the "adjudicated fraud" exclusion can be found here. A separate post discussing an interim decision in the Refco matter and relating to the interaction of the exclusion and the funding of defense costs can be found here.

 

Application Misrepresentations?

Another insurance issue that likely will be raised is the question of policy rescission. Given the magnitude of the fraud and the apparent length of time during which it was going on, the question may be asked whether the policy was procured through misrepresentations in the application process.

 

Under the typical current D&O policy in the U.S., application misrepresentations can serve as a basis on which the carrier can rescind the policy only as to persons with knowledge of the misrepresentations and as to persons to whom that knowledge is imputed. A well-constructed U.S. policy will limit "imputation" so that innocent persons do not risk rescission of their coverage because of another’s misrepresentation. The imputation language used in Satyam’s policy could well be critical.

 

A prior post discussing D&O insurance policy rescission issues can be found here (refer especially to my "final thoughts" toward the end of the post).

 

I welcome any insight readers can provide about the provision of the typical D&O insurance policy in the Indian market, as well as any additional information anyone can supply about the Satyam program, particularly any additional carriers involved.

 

Very special thanks to loyal reader Aruno Rajaratnam for providing a copy of The Economic Times article as well as other information about Satyam.

 

Global Accounting Outlook = Bleak: Fitch’s Ratings has issued a January 8, 2009 report entitled "Accounting and Financial Reporting: 2009 Global Outlook" (available here, registration required) with some very interesting observations about the year ahead for public company accountants. As the report states in its opening line, "these are indeed interesting times for accounting."

 

Among other things, the report notes the following with respect to the "going concern" questions that many companies and their accountants will face as the companies prepare their year-end 2008 financial statements:

 

The sharp decline in global debt and equity securities values and a very difficult credit environment have presented a unique set of chllenges to the interpretation and implementation of some pervasive accounting issues. An immediate question facing some companies preparing their full-year 2008 financial statements, is how best to justify a "going concern" basis, given the doubts some have about their abiltiy to refinance. Management statements on this issue should be required reading for investors and analysts. The determination of impairment charges on debt securities and the lack of clear-cut rules on the subject have pitted some issuers against their auditors. This is a particularly sensitive issue because profitability and regulatory capital adequacy are at state for many financial institutions.

 

Obviously, insurance companies are among the companies for whom the determination of impairment charges will be particularly sensitive. And among others who will want to read companies’ managers’ statements on the "going concern" issue, in addition to investors and analysts, are D&O underwriters.

 

A news article describing the Fitch report can be found here. Special thanks to a loyal reader for sending along the news article and a link to the report.

 

I encourage those that questioned my inclusion of FCPA issues in my list of top ten 2008 development to refer to the January 5, 2009 memo from the Gibson Dunn law firm entitled "2008 Year-End FCPA Update" (here).

 

As the memo puts it, 2008 was ‘by any measure …a monster year in Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (‘FCPA’) enforcement." The memo goes on to note that "2008 saw the FCPA’s enforcement regime mature like never before," adding that "there were no unimportant FCPA enforcement actions this year."

 

The memo highlights several enforcement trends. First, with particular emphasis on the recent massive Siemens FCPA fine, the report notes the trend toward escalating corporate financial penalties.

 

The memo reports that the Siemens fine eclipsed the prior record FCPA fine by nearly twenty times; in fact, the memo notes, the Siemens fine substantially exceeds "the aggregate of every dollar collected by the U.S. government in connection with FCPA settlements over the statute’s thirty-one year history." The memo also emphasizes the staggering costs that Siemens incurred in connection with the investigation. The memo notes that the company’s investigation and corporate remediation costs exceeded $1 billion.

 

To show that "enormous foreign prior settlements are certain not to be a fluke of 2008," the memo cites ABB’s recent announcement that it has reserved $850 million for potential costs associated with the continuing investigation of alleged improper practices.

 

The memo also addresses a theme I have frequently sounded (most recently here), that FCPA enforcement actions increasingly are accompanied by follow-on civil litigation. The memo notes that FCPA investigations increasingly have "spurred a variety of collateral civil suits, including securities fraud actions, shareholder derivative suits, and lawsuits initiated by foreign governments or business partners." Companies "can no longer assume that making peace with DOJ and the SEC will end the pain associated with their alleged FCPA violations."

 

With respect to securities litigation following on after FCPA investigations, the memo notes that "in recent years, courts have been trending towards finding that plaintiffs adequately alleged false or misleading statements, thereby meeting the heightened pleading standard under the PSLRA." However, as I noted in a recent post (here), the Ninth Circuit in the InVision Technologies case made it clear that "there are limits on the types of allegations that will meet this threshold."

 

The memo also reproduces an interesting bar graph showing the foreign jurisdictions having the "dubious distinction of being the most-referenced setting for FCPA allegations." Among the top countries are Nigeria, Iraq, China, Vietnam and Ecuador.

 

The memo, which is detailed and interesting, identifies a number of other important trends, including the increased internationalization of foreign anti-corruption endorsement.

 

Answer: Less Than One Day: In my January 7, 2009 post (here) regarding the accounting scandal dramatically disclosed at the Indian technology company Satyam Computer Services, I raised the question of how long it would take for plaintiffs’ lawyer to initiate a securities class action lawsuit against the company in a U.S. court.

 

The answer is – less than a single day.

 

Even before the close of business on January 7, plaintiffs’ lawyers announced (here) that they had filed a securities class action lawsuit in the Southern District of New York on behalf of purchasers of the company’s ADRs (which are traded, or at least were traded, on the NYSE) against the company and certain of its directors and officers. A copy of one of the Satyam complaints that has been filed can be found here.

 

The well of scandal is an ever-flowing stream, providing the plaintiffs’ bar with a constantly replenished source of new litigation targets. So much for the notion that the pool of potential securities litigation defendants is "fished out."

 

New Year’s Resolution: Some people resolve lose more weight, other people resolve to get more exercise. Even though I need to spend more time fooling around with technology like I need a hole in my head, my New Year’s resolution is to try to get more plugged into the new social media.

 

Along those lines, you will note that I have added a button in the right hand sidebar that links to my LinkedIn profile. I encourage everyone to check out my profile by clicking on the button. I would also like to strongly encourage other readers that are active on LinkedIn to "connect" with me. I am still trying to figure out what the site will lead to, but at least if readers of this blog start connecting we can try to work through it together.

 

In addition, I have recently signed up for Twitter. Again, I am still feeling my way along with the new technology, but I will say that I have used Twitter several times over the past couple of days to alert "followers" (in effect, subscribers) to developments before I had a chance to get a post up on my blog. For example, as soon as I saw the link to Cornerstone’s year end report, I posted a "tweet" on Twitter. I also added a "tweet" about the new Satyam lawsuit as soon as I learned about it. I encourage readers who may also be active on Twitter to sign up for future updates.

 

Finally, I welcome readers’ thoughts and comments on these new media. As I said, I am still trying to figure all of this out, and I am particularly interested in thoughts and comments about how best to take advantage of these new technologies.

 

Because of the dramatic events in the financial and credit markets, 2008 will undoubtedly go down in history as a dark and difficult year. 2008 was a challenging year for bloggers, too. So much happened of such significance that trying to find the time to comment and the words to express it all were almost overwhelming blogging challenges.

 

But dramatic headline events do not always make the best blog posts, because high profile events are exhaustively reported in the mainstream media. The blog posts that stand out in retrospect are those that analyze a specific detail of larger events reported elsewhere; that draw connections between otherwise disparate events; or that highlight developments that otherwise would be lost in the noise.

 

I have set out below my own list of The D&O Diary’s Top Ten Blog Posts of 2008. I have used a simple standard in determining which posts to include; I listed posts that stand up best to re-reading now. The Top Ten posts are presented chronologically.

 

1. "CDO Squared" Securities Lawsuit Hits MBIA (January 13, 2008): MBIA is only one of several bond insurers to get caught up in the subprime litigation wave. But the lawsuit against MBIA arose at a time when all of us were still just becoming acquainted with some of the complex financial instruments that have caused so much trouble.

 

This post attempted to explore the then-unfamiliar CDO-squared instruments, incorporating into the exercise both a detailed study of Warren Buffett’s condemnation of derivative securities as "financial weapons of mass destruction," as well as a reflection of the possible lessons for the current crisis from the near-collapse of Long Term Capital Management ten years earlier.

 

Little did I suspect at the time how relevant my observations about derivative securities or the lessons of LTCM would become later in 2008. (As an aside, I must note how instructive I found it to reread now all of January 2008’s posts. What an astonishing year 2008 was.)

 

2. Auction Rate Securities: The Next Subprime Litigation Wave? (February 13, 2008): This post commented on "a developing breakdown in an obscure corner of the credit market involving debt instruments called ‘auction rate securities.’" The post accurately foresaw the coming wave of auction rate securities litigation, which according to my tally involved at least 21 companies in new securities lawsuits during 2008. (My subprime and credit crisis-related litigation tally, which includes auction rate securities litigation, can be found here.)

 

Litigation involving auction rate securities remained one of the top securities litigation stories throughout 2008 (as reflected here, for example), and the lawsuits were a significant factor in the upsurge in new securities filings in 2008. My complete overview of the 2008 securities filings can be found here.

 

3. A Single "Toxic" CDO, A Multitude of Subprime Lawsuits (March 9, 2008): So many of 2008’s dramatic events were so large and their effects were so sweeping that they defy easy comprehension. An alternative way to try to understand what happened is to look at a single investment vehicle – in this case, a collateralized debt obligation (CDO) called "Mantoloking" – and examine the difficulties and litigation that has followed in its wake.

 

The extent and magnitude of the problems from just this one investment structure (among other things, it played a role in Bear Stearns’ demise) helps put some context around the problems now besetting the global financial marketplace.

 

4. D&O Insurance: Defense Expense and Limits Adequacy (June 2, 2008): Every now and then a set of circumstances come along that helps illustrate one of the perennial problems in D&O insurance. In this instance, the case involved was the criminal prosecution arising from the collapse of Collins & Aikman. The particular problem involved was the possibility that defense costs alone threatened to exhaust the company’s entire $50 million insurance program before the criminal case even went to trial.

 

As discussed in the post, the increasing possibility that defense costs could deplete or exhaust available insurance undermines traditional notions of limits adequacy and underscores the importance of issues involving program structure as part of the insurance acquisition process.

 

5. Section 11 Lawsuits: Coming Soon to a State Court Near You (July 21, 2008): One of the more interesting (yet little noted) features of the subprime and credit crisis-related litigation wave has been the frequency with which plaintiffs’ lawyers in reliance on the ’33 Act’s concurrent jurisdiction have chosen to file Section 11 lawsuits in state court rather than federal court.

 

As I speculated elsewhere (refer here), these state court lawsuits arguably represent an involved form of forum shopping. They also may represent an attempted end run around the PSLRA’s procedural requirements. But whatever the motivation may be, the plaintiffs’ bar has shown a heightened interest in proceeding in state court and have even has some success in opposing removal to federal court.

 

In the general hubbub of the current financial turmoil, this litigation development has not attracted nearly as much attention as it deserves. The anomalous phenomenon of federal class action litigation going forward – in significant volume – in state court represents a trend that deserves greater attention. As I have noted in this blog post, some "recalibration" may be required.

 

6. A Closer Look at the Fed’s $85 Billion AIG Bailout (September 17, 2008): Both the significance and consequences of the AIG bailout are still emerging, as reflected in Carol Loomis’s December 24, 2008 Fortune article (here). But in rereading a blog post written in the immediate aftermath of the first announcement of the AIG bailout, it appears that many of the continuing questions were immediately apparent.

 

7. WaMu: A Thrift Falls in the Forest: (September 28, 2008): It is one measure of the massive scale of this fall’s events that the largest bank failure in U.S. history is almost a footnote to the year’s events. Even though WaMu’s failure may be overshadowed by other events, that does not mean that the event lacks significance. Indeed, many of the consequences of WaMu’s collapse still have yet to emerge.

 

Moreover, WaMu was only one of 25 bank failures in the U.S. during 2008. Though overshadowed by other more dramatic events, these bank failures portend further difficulties in 2009.

 

8. More Damn Things to Worry About (September 30, 2008): So many things happened so quickly in September 2008 that we were all left wondering: what else could go wrong? This post embodies sheer frustration we felt at the time and the depth of the concern about what may lie ahead. Many of the specific fears expressed have indeed come to pass. Though written quickly and at a very late hour, the post withstands scrutiny now.

 

9. Reading the New Buffett Bio (October 8, 2008): In the midst of this Fall’s financial crisis, it was a reassuring pleasure to read about Warren Buffett’s life. I enjoyed Alice Schroeder’s new biography of Buffett, and I enjoyed writing about her book. Writing a book review is something of a departure for this blog, but it stands out perhaps for that very reason. Given everything that was happening at the time, it was a relief just to read a book.

 

10. The Evolving Credit Crisis Litigation Wave (December 3, 2008): As we head into 2009, it is critically important to understand that as 2008 progressed, not only did the credit crisis itself evolve into something much more extensive and dangerous, but so too did the related litigation wave. In an earlier post (here), I speculated that the litigation wave might have reached an "inflection point." Further lawsuit filings confirmed that the litigation wave has spread beyond the financial sector.

 

Because this litigation wave is likely to continue to spread in the weeks and months ahead, this development represents an important and noteworthy trend for the New Year.

 

And Finally: In addition to my favorite blog posts, I also had a favorite video of the year, the viral video Where the Hell is Matt? I not only smile every time I watch this video, I like it a little bit more with each viewing. YouTube reports that the video has been viewed over 16 million times. Matt’s website (here) reports that the video was shot in 42 countries and took 14 months to videotape and edit.

 

https://youtube.com/watch?v=zlfKdbWwruY%26hl%3Den%26fs%3D1

2009 has barely just begun but the year’s first corporate scandal, which has quickly been dubbed the "Indian Enron," has already arrived. Your radar might not have picked this one up yet, but you may want to take a quick look at today’s news involving Indian information technology company Satyam Computer Services, Ltd.

 

As reported in articles on Bloomberg (here) and the New York Times website (here), Satyam’s Chairman, Ramalinga Raju, has sent a January 7, 2009 letter of resignation to the company’s Board of Directors, with copies the Bombay stock exchanges, in which he reveals, as the Times puts it, that "the company’s financial position had been massively inflated during the company’s expansion from a handful of employees into an outsourcing giant with 53,000 employees and operations in 66 countries."

 

It appears that as much as 53.6 billion rupees (or about $1.04 billion) in cash that the company reported as of the end of the second quarter that ended in September, was nonexistent. The company’s reported second quarter revenue was actually 21 billion rupees, rather than the reported 27 billion rupees.

 

The Chairman’s letter, which can be found here, is an absolutely extraordinary document.

 

With "deep regret and a tremendous burden," the Chairman details the specific balance sheet accounts that were inflated due to "non-existent cash." The letter further explains how the balance sheet "gap" came to exist – it is, the Chairman reports, "purely on account of inflated profits over a period of the last several years."

 

The letter states matter-of-factly that "what started as a marginal gap between the actual operating profit and one reflected in the books of accounts continued to grow over the years. It has attained unmanageable proportions as the size of the company operations grew." The letter goes on to describe how the company strained to maintain the gap over time." The letter further describes the company’s attempts to work out of its dilemma by merging with other companies, which the letter describes as the "last attempt to fill the fictitious assets with real ones." (The mergers fell through.)

 

It was, the letter says "like riding a tiger without knowing how to get off without being eaten."

 

In an apparent bid to exculpate himself, the Chairman notes that neither he nor the company’s Managing Director (or their spouses) sold any shares, nor have the taken "one rupee/dollar from the company" and they have not "benefitted in financial terms on account of the inflated results."

 

The Chairman graciously emphasizes that none of the past or present board members "had any knowledge of the situation in which the company is placed." After identifying each of these individuals by name, he states that none of them "were aware of the real situation as against the books of accounts."

 

The letter concludes with a description of the corrective actions the company will now take, an apology, and the Chairman’s resignation.

 

The company, whose name means "truth" in Sanskrit, trades its shares on the Bombay stock exchange and also has American Depository Receipts that trade on the New York Stock Exchange. Its shares also trade on the Euronext exchange.As of the close of trading on January 6, 2009, the company had a market capitalization of over $3 billion. However, the shares plunged 77% in trading on the Bombay exchange today.

 

The Times reports that the company is audited by PricewaterhouseCoopers.

 

According to a January 7, 2009 commentary on the Wall Street Journal’s website (here), Satyam’s scandal is already being called "India’s Enron." Perhaps that comparison was inevitable, but I think the scandal, particularly the Chairman’s extraordinary letter of confession, has overtones of the Madoff affair.

 

How long do you suppose it will be before a securities class action lawsuit is initiated in the U.S.?

 

UPDATE: The answer to this question is: less than one day. Plaintiffs’ lawyers January 7, 2009 press release about their newly filed securities lawsuits agasint Satyam and certain of its directors and officers on behalf of purchasers of the American ADRs can be found here. The case was filed in the Southern District of New York.

FURTHER UPDATE: A copy of one of the Satyam complaints can be found here.

 

Special thanks to a loyal reader for supplying a copy of the Chairman’s letter.

 

In recent posts discussing year-end trends, my observations included predictions that credit crisis related lawsuits would continue in 2009 and that increased levels of bank failures could lead to further "dead bank" litigation. As it turns out, 2009’s first-filed securities class action lawsuit appears to reflect both of these projected trends.

 

According to the plaintiffs’ attorneys’ January 6, 2009 press release (here), they have filed a securities class action lawsuit in the Central District of California alleging that PFF Bancorp and certain of its directors and officers issued false and misleading statements about the company’s financial condition and business practices in violation of the federal securities laws. Until the bank’s closure, PFF operated a community bank located in Pomona, California.

 

As the FDIC reported (here), on November 21, 2008, banking regulators closed PFF and its assets were transferred to U.S. Bankcorp. PFF is one of the twenty-five U.S. banks that failed during 2008. (The FDIC’s complete list of the failed banks can be found here.)

 

The only defendants named in the complaint (which can be found here) are the company’s former CEO and former CFO. According to the press release, the Complaint alleges that the defendants "concealed" the bank’s "improper lending to borrowers with little ability to repay the amount loaned and failed to inform investors of the impact of changes in the real estate market in San Bernardino and Riverside Counties."

 

Specifically, and according to the press release, the Complaint alleges that the defendants concealed that:

 

(a) PFF’s assets contained hundreds of millions of dollars worth of impaired and risky securities, many of which were backed by real estate that was rapidly dropping in value; (b) prior to and during the Class Period, PFF had been extremely aggressive in generating loans, including being heavily involved in offering Home Equity Lines of Credit ("HELOCs"), which would be enormously problematic if the value of residential real estate did not continue to increase; (c) defendants failed to properly account for PFF’s real estate loans, failing to reflect impairment in the loans; (d) PFF’s business prospects were much worse than represented due to problems in the Inland Empire market, which was a key focus of PFF’s business; and (e) PFF had not adequately reserved for loan losses on HELOCs and on other real estate-related assets.

 

In prior posts, I have speculated (most recently here) that the growing number of failed banks could lead to a wave of failed bank litigation. I also recently projected (here) the likelihood that credit crisis related litigation wave will continue in 2009. One case is obviously no basis from which to generalize, but it does at least indicate that the forces on which I based my speculations are at least at work.

 

The likely operation of these factors, as well as the Madoff litigation and the general turbulent conditions in the financial marketplace, are among the reasons that that 2009 could be a very active year for securities litigation.

 

The year has barely begun and the horizon is still wide open, but from my perspective we seemed to have picked up right where we left off.

 

In any event, I have added the PFF Bancorp case to my running tally of the subprime and credit crisis-related lawsuits, which can be accessed here. With the addition of the first-filed case of 2009 to the list, the number of subprime and credit crisis-related lawsuit filed during the period 2007 through 2009 now stands at 142.

 

On January 6, 2008, Cornerstone Research and the Stanford Law School Securities Class Action Clearinghouse released their report on the 2008 securities class action lawsuit filings entitled "2008: A Year in Review." The Report can be found here and the accompanying press release can be found here.

 

According to the Cornerstone Report, through December 15, 2008, there were 210 securities class action lawsuits filed in 2008, which represents an 18% increase over 2007 and an 80% increase over 2006. The Report also found that the 2008 filing levels represented a 9% increase over the average annual filing level of 192 for the 11 years ending in December 2007.

 

As discussed below, the Report’s analysis of the 2008 filing levels is consistent with my own previously released analysis, which can be found here.

 

Cornerstone’s release of its annual securities litigation report is a much-anticipated event, and this year’s Report does not disappoint. It contains a veritable treasure trove of detailed observations, including a multitude of complex comments about the magnitude of financial losses involved in securities cases over time. The Report also has a host of other detailed comments about the specifics of the 2008 filings.

 

The Report merits a thorough and comprehensive reading. I briefly summarize the Report’s findings below and follow with my own comments.

 

The Cornerstone Report’s Findings

The Report observes that the period of heightened filing activity began in the second half of 2007. The 317 filings during the last 18 months represent a 71 percent increase over the 185 filings during the preceding 18-month period.

 

The Report finds that the 2008 filing activity was "dominated by a wave of litigation against firms in the financial sector" and that "litigation against firms closest to the on-going subprime/liquidity."

 

The 2008 Report introduces a truly nifty innovation called the Securities Litigation Heat Map, which graphically shows how concentrated the 2008 securities filing activity was in the financial sector. Among other things, the Map shows that nearly a third of all large financial firms were named defendants in a securities class action in 2008.

 

The Heat Map also shows how over the years different sectors have been variously targeted in securities lawsuits.

 

The Heat Maps confirm what practitioners in this area have long known, which is the litigation activity is strongly driven by sectors slides and contagion effects, as a result of which over time industry alone has proven to be a very poor predictor of likely future securities litigation activity. Simply put, the plaintiffs lawyers simply move on to then next hot trend.

 

The Report also includes the annual analysis of what it calls Disclosure Dollar Losses (that is, market capitalization losses at the end of each class period). The Report finds that these losses for 2008 class actions totaled $227 billion, which is 48 percent more than 2007 and 75 percent more than the annual average for the 11 years ending in 2007, and also represents the highest level since 2000.

 

In its review of the status of database cases, the Report finds that of resolved cases, 41 percent were dismissed and 59 were settled. The majority of cases were resolved after the first ruling on the motion to dismiss but before the rulings on summary judgments. For class actions filed between 1996 and 2002 and resolved by the end of 2008, the median time to resolution was 33 months, the median time to settlement was 37 months, and the median time to dismissal was 25 months. The Report also concludes that class action with higher shareholder losses take longer to resolve.

 

The Report also notes that the percentage of cases involving Section 11 claims increased to its highest level in 2008. The Report also noted that with respect to alleged violations of GAAP, there has been a shift from allegations related to income line statements to allegations related to balance sheet components. The Report also notes that seven of the 192 companies named in class actions in 2008 subsequently filed for bankruptcy, compared to two out of 172 in 2007 (although five of the 2007 companies filed for bankruptcy in 2008).

 

The Number of 2008 Filings

The Report’s tally of 210 new securities filings through December 15, 2008 is essentially consistent with my own report’s conclusion (refer here) that there were 224 new securities lawsuits through December 31, 2008, as there were 13 new securities lawsuits filed after December 15 and before December 31. The 13 additional lawsuits I included in my tally but that were omitted from the Cornerstone Report account for virtually all of the difference between the two analyses.

 

The arrival of 13 new securities lawsuits in the last two weeks of the year is unusual, as December is usually a slower month for new filings. The late December influx was largely but not exclusively due to the flood of Madoff- related litigation.

 

Cornerstone’s Report’s cutoff at December 15 is significant in other respects as well. For example, the Report states that lawsuit filings dipped in the second half of the year, and even relies on the supposed second half decline as one of the grounds on which it suggests that financial sector securities lawsuit filings may diminish in 2009. The Report also devotes a great deal of effort to trying to reconcile this supposed second half decline with observations regarding stock market volatility.

 

However, when all of the lawsuits filed through year end are included, it turns out that filings actually increased in the second half of the year. Not only that, but as I pointed out in my report on the 2008 filings, the securities lawsuit filing levels in the fourth quarter 2008 and in December 2008 represent, respectively, the highest quarterly and monthly totals in over five years.

 

Projected 2009 Filing Trends

The Report contains no predictions regarding likely overall 2009 filing levels, but the accompanying press release quotes Stanford Law Professor Joseph Grundfest to the effect that securities litigation against the financial sector may decline in 2009 because "virtually all the major financial services firms have already been sued," as a result of which "the pool of major financial services defendants might be getting fished out." In support of this conclusion, the Report among other things cites the fact that of the 15 largest financial services companies by market capitalization at the beginning of 2007, 12 of them have already been sued.

 

Professor Grundfest does not actually predict that overall securities lawsuit filings will decline in 2009; however, in the press release, he is quoted as saying that, because all of the major financial institutions have already been sued, "the supply of new defendants might be drying up." He also suggests that "litigation activity against the financial sector may decline next year," and in the Report adds that "it is unclear as to whether the wave of litigation will extend significantly beyond the larges financial firms in the near future."

 

My own view is that 2009 could well be a very active year for securities litigation. This view is based in part on the surge of litigation in the latter part of 2008, which shows every sign of continuing. The fact that there were thirty new securities class action lawsuits in December 2008, including ten new credit crisis-related lawsuits, strongly suggests that plaintiffs’ lawyers are finding no shortage of targets.

 

In addition, the credit crisis litigation wave long ago ceased to be just about the large financial institutions, if indeed it ever was just about that. As time has gone by, the wave has continued to spread and evolve. One attribute of this evolution is that as 2008 progressed, the credit crisis litigation has extended far beyond the financial services sector, as I noted most recently here.

 

In other words, the plaintiffs’ lawyers may or may not find new targets in the financial sector. (Although I strongly suspect that as a result of the Madoff scandal the plaintiffs’ lawyers will find innumerable new financial sector targets, but that is a separate issue.) The likeliest scenario, borne out by filing patterns that are already emerging, is that the plaintiffs will simply move on to other sectors, as they have numerous times in the past.

 

I note parenthetically that the probable movement of the litigation to a new sector is graphically foreshadowed by the Cornerstone Report’s Securities Litigation Heat Maps, which vividly show how quickly plaintiffs’ lawyers have moved from sector to sector in the past.

 

All of which I believe suggests that the heightened filing levels show every likelihood of continuing into 2009. Indeed, given the strong likelihood of additional Madoff victim litigation, as well as the likely continued spread of the credit crisis litigation wave outside the financial sector, the likeliest possibility is that 2009 will be a very active year for securities litigation.

 

The WSJ.com Law Blog has a January 5, 2009 post (here) discussing the 2008 securities lawsuit filings and quoting both from the Cornerstone Report and from my analysis of the 2008 filings.

 

2008 was a remarkably eventful year, from the dramatic events that rocked the financial markets to the Presidential election that resulted in a change in national leadership. Virtually all of the significant events during 2008 also had an impact on the world of D&O insurance, one way or another. In all likelihood, significant developments will continue to emerge during 2009, with further implications for the D&O marketplace.

 

In a year as eventful as 2008, selecting as the most significant events is a challenging task. But with an eye toward the developments of greatest significance for the D&O industry, I have prepared the following list of the top ten stories of 2008.

 

1. Credit Crisis Becomes Global Financial Calamity: What began in 2007 as a subprime meltdown had by early 2008 become a credit crisis, which in turn evolved during Fall 2008 into a full blown global financial disaster.

 

Within the space of just a few short weeks, the government took control of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac; the FDIC took over Washington Mutual, in the largest U.S. bank failure ever; Lehman Brothers collapsed, in the largest U.S. bankruptcy ever; Bank of America agreed to acquire Merrill Lynch in a government brokered deal; the government undertook a massive bailout of AIG; Congress enacted a colossal $700 billion bailout package; and Wells Fargo agreed to acquire Wachovia. And those events came after a raft of prior financial shocks, including the collapse of Bear Stearns, the seizure of the auction rate securities market, and the disintegration of U.S. residential real estate market.

 

Any one of these events on its own would be significant. Taken collectively these events represent an enormous upheaval, the full ramifications and consequences of which will only emerge over the months and years to come.

 

And those are just the headlines. In other developments reported "below the fold," companies around the world have grappled with a general business downturn, wrestled with the threat of their own insolvency or that of their customers or suppliers, and basically tried to maintain their ground in an increasingly hostile financial environment.

 

All of these developments have enormous potential significance, much of it yet to unfold. These events have not only fueled litigation, but they have also presented D&O underwriters with a dramatically altered underwriting environment. The perils involve not only the challenge of underwriting financially troubled companies, but also the trial of underwriting in the context of rapidly changing (and deteriorating) conditions in the financial and credit markets.

 

During 2008, the world became significantly more dangerous for D&O underwriters. All signs suggest the current perilous conditions will continue into 2009, and perhaps beyond.

 

2. Financial Market Disruptions Hit Major Insurers: The turmoil in the financial markets also battered three insurers that are major players in the D&O marketplace. AIG’s woes required an enormous government bailout. XL and Hartford both faced differing degrees of turbulence due to write-downs in their respective investment portfolios.

 

Each of one of these insurers is dealing with their own unique set of circumstances. Rating agencies have noted and responded to these developments. Insurance buyers remain anxious and wary. The implications of these developments, both for each of these insurers and for the marketplace as a whole, remain to be seen. At a minimum, these events have disrupted the D&O insurance marketplace and introduced a significant element of uncertainty. The disruptive impact from these developments is likely to continue to affect the D&O industry throughout 2009.

 

3. Subprime and Credit Crisis Litigation Wave Rolls On: The subprime litigation wave that began in 2007 continued to surge in 2008, as there were 101 new subprime and credit-crisis related securities lawsuits filed during 2008, bringing the two-year total to 141. My running tally of the subprime and credit crisis-related securities lawsuits can be accessed here.

 

As time has passed, the litigation wave has continued to evolve; for example, the 2008 subprime and credit crisis-related litigation included as many as 21 auction rate securities lawsuits all of which were filed in the earlier part of 2008. Later in the year, a string of lawsuits initiated by holders of preferred or subordinated securities emerged (as discussed here).

 

In February 2009, the subprime and credit crisis-related litigation wave will enter its third year, but the phenomenon shows no signs of abating. The credit crisis-related securities lawsuits continued to accumulate throughout 2008. Of the 101 subprime and credit crisis-related lawsuits filed in 2008, 45 were filed in the second half of the year, including ten in December alone.

 

The credit crisis lawsuit filings remained high as the year ended, suggesting that significant credit crisis litigation activity will continue well into 2009 and perhaps beyond.

 

4. Credit Crisis Litigation Spreads Beyond the Financial Sector: As massive as the subprime and credit crisis-related litigation wave has been, it had until recently been concentrated in the financial sector. But as 2008 wore on, and largely as a result of the dramatic events in the global financial markets during September and October 2008, the litigation wave spread beyond the financial sector.

 

The companies that have become involved in this extended litigation wave include, for example, those that had significant exposure to Lehman Brothers or other companies that collapsed this fall. (Refer here and here for discussion of these "new wave" credit crisis lawsuits). In addition, companies that have been drawn in include companies that made wrong way bets on commodities or currencies (about which refer here).

 

These developments suggest that the credit crisis-related litigation wave may have entered a dangerous new phase, as I discuss at greater length here. These developments also underscore the challenges for D&O underwriters in the current environment.

 

My complete rundown of all 2008 securities litigation can be found here.

 

5. Bank Failures Surge: Led by the FDIC’s assumption of control of Washington Mutual in the largest bank failure in U.S. history, bank failures surged in 2008. According to the FDIC’s website (here), there were 25 bank failures in 2008, the highest annual total since 1994, at the end of the last era of failed banks. Perhaps even more significantly, the pace of bank closures increased as the year progressed; 21 of the 2008 bank closures took place in the second half of 2008, 12 of them in the fourth quarter.

 

In many ways, other financial events have overshadowed this sudden surge in bank failures. Indeed, as I noted here, the WaMu failure, the largest in U.S. history, has largely been relegated to yesterday’s news pile. But the timing and pace of the bank closures during 2008 suggests that there are likely to be further bank failures ahead, carrying with it the threat of associated "dead bank" litigation, a possibility I previously discussed here.

 

6. Madoff Scandal Triggers Litigation Torrent: The revelation of the massive Ponzi scheme involving Bernard Madoff and his firm has triggered a wave of litigation as aggrieved investors scrambled to try to recoup their losses. The first Madoff-related lawsuits targeted Madoff and his firm. But given the unlikelihood of a significant recovery there, investors have quickly moved on to other targets. A running tally of the Madoff investor litigation can be accessed here.

 

The primary Madoff-related litigation targets are the so-called "feeder funds" that invested with Madoff on their clients behalf. Recent blog posts discussing these "feeder funds" lawsuits can be found here and here. Given the magnitude of the investor losses and the depth of investor outrage, these lawsuits are likely to continue to accrue for some time to come. Press reports (for example, here) suggest that lawyers are gearing up for a litigation onslaught.

 

7. Presidential Election Signals Changes: I don’t know whether you heard, but there was an election in November. The coming changes in the White House as well as the increased Democratic majority in Congress could signal significant future legislative and other developments.

 

The arrival of the new administration will likely mean a change in direction for judicial appointments. A more interesting question is whether the Democratic control of Congress and the White House could lead to legislative changes in the securities laws. As discussed at the PLUS International Conference in November (about which refer here), the current financial turmoil could be used as a justification for legislative reform efforts – for example, an attempt to overturn Central Bank and Stoneridge.

 

At a minimum, the coming changes in the leadership at the SEC, together with a different leadership interpretation of the meaning and value of regulation, could lead to a changed environment for the enforcement of the securities laws.

 

8. Largest-Ever Fine Underscores the Growing Significance of the FCPA: For some time now (most recently here), I have been writing about the growing importance of Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) enforcement activity and associated civil litigation. The FCPA mounting significance was dramatically underscored recently when Siemens agreed to pay an $800 million fine.

 

The Siemens fine is the largest ever, dwarfing the previous record fine, paid by Baker Hughes, of $44 million (about which refer here). The outcome of the Siemens investigation is merely the latest development in a long chain of events highlighting the growing importance of the FCPA.

 

As I have previously noted (refer here), one of the usual accompaniments of an FCPA investigation is follow-on civil litigation. As the threat of FCPA-related exposure continues to grow, the threat of follow-on civil litigation will also increase.

 

The FCPA Blog has a detailed overview of 2008 FCPA enforcement activity here.

 

9. Defense Expense Tests Limits Adequacy: Companies ensnared in high stakes litigation may find themselves confronting an unexpected new challenge – the increasing likelihood that defense costs alone could exhaust the entire amount of available D&O insurance coverage. This threat was unfortuntately realized in connection with the Collins & Aikman bankruptcy and related criminal proceeding (about which refer here), where accumulated defense expense exhausted the company’s entire $50 million D&O insurance, before the criminal case even went to trial.

 

The possibility that escalating defense expense could entirely deplete available insurance presents a frightening prospect for individuals involved in a serious D&O claim, and also raises troubling questions about traditional notions of limits adequacy. In addition, the possibility of total limits exhaustion as the result of the requirements of multiple claims and multiple insureds underscores the need for insurance buyers to consider alternative insurance structures (such as, for example, separate insurance for an individual or a group of individuals) to ensure that segregated funds remain available in the event of a catastrophic claim.

 

10. Indemnity Developments Trigger Additional Insurance Structure Concerns: In the Schoon v. Troy case (about which refer here), the Delaware Chancery Court held that a board of directors properly could eliminate former directors’ advancement rights retroactively. The possibility that former directors could lose their rights to advancement or indemnification comes as unwelcome news to many directors.

 

This case development, like the development about limits adequacy noted above, highlights the need to address program structure as part of the insurance acquisition process. In general, directors and officers have become more concerned about the availability of insurance protection when they need it most. As a result, interest in a wider variety of auxiliary insurance structures has increased. These structures can include new insurance solutions designed for the needs of retiring directors.

 

In a year as eventful as 2008, reasonable minds could differ about what events deserve to be included in any Top Ten list. I am very interested in readers’ views about the top stories, particularly those who feel that other events deserved to be included on the list.

 

More "Top" Lists: Making year-end lists seems to be a nearly universal phenomenon, and Top Ten lists abound. Time Magazine simplified things by creating "The Top Ten of Everything of 2008," which can be found here.

 

Then  there are always the lists of the "Bottom Ten," like Business Week’s list of the Ten Worst Predictions About 2008 (here). Fortune has a list (here) of the "dumbest" business decisions of 2008, but given the kind of year 2008 was, a list of just ten was not enough – the magazine’s targets 21 business decisions as "dumbest."

 

Perhaps the most entertaining "Top" list is VideoGum’s list of the Top Viral Videos of 2008, which can be viewed below. (Viewer discretion is advised as some persons may find some of the content offensive.)

http://videogum.com/v/5l6uI1VbM4ULw

 

PLUS D&O Symposium: Readers will also want to be sure to register for the annual PLUS D&O Symposium, which will be held on February 25 and 26, 2009, at the Marriott Marquis Hotel in New York. Information about the Symposium, including registration instructions, can be found here.

 

The Symposium will feature an all-star cast, including keynote speakers Madeline Albright and NY Insurance Department Superintendant Eric Dinallo. Wilson Sonsini partner Boris Feldman will once again be moderating the annual panel on securities litigation developments. The schedule also includes a panel on Bankruptcies and Bailouts, with panelists including VJ Dowling of Dowling & Partners Securities and David Bradford of Advisen.

 

The conference will also include a replay of the excellent video, "The Rise and Fall of Bill Lerach" (a movie trailer for which can be found here). Stanford Law Professor Joseph Grundfest will lead a panel discussion of the video. The video was shown at the PLUS International Conference in November 2008 and received rave reviews.

 

Readers with any questions about the Symposium should feel free to drop me a note or give me a call.

 

Over the holidays, I added two blog posts that readers may find particularly interesting. To make sure that readers returning to their desks after the holidays do not overlook them, I have highlighted the two posts below, with links.

 

The List: Madoff Investor and Feeder Fund Litigation (December 26, 2008): This post is the access point to a table of Madoff Investor and Feeder Fund litigation. I have updated the litigation table numerous times since the initial publication, as several readers have helpfully provided relevant additional links and documents.

 

 

I will continue to update the table as new Madoff litigation arises. Readers are strongly encouraged to let me know of any new or additional information necessary to keep the table accurate and up to date.

 

 

A Closer Look at the 2008 Securities Lawsuits (January 2, 2009): As part of an annual feature on this blog, I reviewed last year’s securities lawsuit filings. As detailed in greater length in the post, the 224 new securities filings in 2008 represents the highest annual filing total since 2004.

 

 

The post also discusses the possible impact of the 2008 securities filing activity on the D&O insurance marketplace.

 

 

2008 Year in Review: On January 6, 2008, at 2:00 p.m. EST, I will be participating in a free webcast sponsored by the Securities Docket (here) entitled “2008 Year in Review: Securities Litigation and SEC Enforcement.”

 

 

The webcast will be moderated by Bruce Carton of the Securities Docket, and will feature several of my fellow bloggers, including Francine McKenna of the re: The Auditors blog (here); Tom Gorman of the SEC Actions blog (here); and Walter Olson of the Point of Law blog (here). Additional information about the webcast can be found here.