

Ever since the U.S. Supreme Court’s March 2010 decision in Morrison v. National Australia Bank courts have struggled with application of the Morrison Court’s standard to securities lawsuits involving transactions in American Depository Receipts. As I noted in a prior blog post, one of the latest court rulings involving the application of Morrison to ADR transactions was the denial of the motion for class certification in the Toshiba case. In the following guest post, Daniel J. Tyukody and Robert A. Horowitz take a closer look that the class certification motion denial in Toshiba and consider the implications of the ruling. Tyukody and Horowitz are Co-Chairs of Greenberg Traurig, LLP’s Securities Litigation Practice. I would like to thank the authors for allowing me to publish their article as a guest post on this site. I welcome guest post submissions from responsible authors on topics of interest to this blog’s readers. Here is the authors’ article. Continue Reading Guest Post: The Elusive Search For Determining The Reach Of Section 10(b) Liability Following Morrison
In what is one of the largest shareholder derivative lawsuit settlements ever, the parties to the various FirstEnergy bribery-related derivative lawsuits have reached an agreement to settle the actions for a payment of $180 million and the company’s agreement to adopt a number of corporate governance reforms. The settlement amount is to be funded by D&O insurance. The settlement agreement is subject to court approval. First Energy’s February 10, 2022 announcement of the settlement can be found 
In the latest SPAC-related securities class action lawsuit to be filed, a plaintiff shareholder has filed a post-merger lawsuit against a commercial space launch company that merged with a SPAC in June 2021. As is the case with many of the SPAC-related securities lawsuits, the defendant company was sued after its share price declined following the publication of a short-seller report. A copy of the complaint filed against Astra Space, Inc. on February 9, 2022 can be found
Readers of this blog know that two important current litigation trends involve the filing of claims relating to cybersecurity incidents and the filing of COVID-19-related claims. A new securities class action lawsuit filed this week touched on both of these securities suit filing trends. Secure technology company Telos Corporation was hit with a securities suit following a decline in the price of its shares after the company experienced revenue delays owing to cybersecurity and coronavirus related “headwinds” that postponed the company’s performance of two key contracts. A copy of the plaintiffs’ complaint filed on February 7, 2022 against Telos can be found
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In the latest example of a SPAC-related securities class action lawsuit against a post-SPAC-merger company in the electric vehicle industry, a plaintiff shareholder has filed a securities suit against Electric Last Mile Solutions, Inc. an EV company that merged with a SPAC in June 2021. The lawsuit comes after the company announced the departure of its CEO and its Chairman and the need for the company to restate prior financial statements. A copy of the plaintiff’s February 3, 2022 complaint can be found
Securities class action lawsuit filings “plummeted” in 2021 compared to recent prior years, largely as a result of declines in M&A litigation and in the number of “core” Rule 10b-5 lawsuits, according to the latest annual report from Cornerstone Research. According to the report, entitled “Securities Class Action Filings: 2021 Year in Review,” the number of new federal and state securities class action lawsuit filings decline 35% compared to 2020, but nevertheless remained “in line” with the 2012-2016 average. The report can be found
On February 9, 2022, the New York City Bar will be hosting the 10th Annual Securities Litigation & Enforcement Institute in a webcast format. The program will go from 9 am to 5 pm and will include a number of distinguished speakers. The keynote speaker keynote speaker will be Steven Peikin, the former Co-Head of Enforcement of the SEC in the prior administration. Stanford Law Professor Joseph Grundfest will also be among the other speakers. I will be speaking on a panel during the afternoon session on the topic of “Securities Litigation: Major Cases and Trends: Goldman and other Important Cases.” The panel will be moderated by Greg Markel of the Seyfarth Shaw law firm. The panel will include Meredith Kotler of the Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer law firm; Laura Posner of the Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC law firm; and Jeffrey T. Scott of the Sullivan & Cromwell LLP law firm. For further information about the event, including registration information, please refer