Since the outset of President Trump’s efforts to conduct trade policy through an active use of tariffs, I have been concerned about the possibility of tariff-related corporate and securities litigation. Inevitably, I have been concerned, investors will say that companies tried to soft-pedal the likely impact of tariffs on the companies’ financial results. But while

With the news about the coronavirus outbreak dominating the headlines, other important stories have faded into the background — though they definitely have not gone away. Among these important continuing stories is the U.S. trade war with China. The frontlines of this trade war are on the battlefield of economic competition, which these days includes, among other things, export and import controls and other coercive measures. As one commentator has put it, the “highest-profile example of the United States’ use of targeted coercive measures against China is its yearlong campaign against Huawei, China’s national-champion telecommunications company.” And as a recently filed lawsuit demonstrates, among the implications of the two countries’ competition – and specifically, the U.S. measures targeting Huawei – is a risk that affected companies can be exposed to government investigations and also to D&O claims.
Continue Reading Semiconductor Company Hit with China Trade War-Related Securities Suit