Tuesday, November 19, 2013

UK Appeals Court Green Lights Two Important LIBOR-Related Cases

Author: David Schwartz J.D. CPA
On November 8, 2013, a three-judge panel of the UK Court of Appeals handed down a much awaited ruling in two LIBOR-related cases. The ruling allows plaintiffs in two cases involving interest rate swap transactions referencing LIBOR to amend their claims to allege that the defendant banks made implied representations that their participation in setting the LIBOR rate was honest. In other words, the plaintiffs are now able to allege that at the time the swap transactions were entered into, the defendant banks knew or should have known that LIBOR was being manipulated, but represented otherwise.
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Thursday, August 8, 2013

A Mixed Mid-Year Scorecard for Securities Class Action Lawsuits

Author: David Schwartz J.D. CPA
Jonathan C. Dickey, partner and Co-Chair of the National Securities Litigation Practice Group at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, has published his mid-year review of securities class action lawsuits on Harvard's corporate governance and Financial Regulation blog.. Twice a year Dickey surveys the class action lawsuit landscape looking for filing and settlement trends. Thus far in 2013, his review is a mixed bag of good and not so good news for financial firms, as it reflects "business as usual" for plaintiffs' lawyers.
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Monday, June 3, 2013

Be Careful What You Ask For: The Coming Storm of Financial Litigation in the UK

Author: David Schwartz J.D. CPA
Regulatory and structural reforms to the UK's system of financial regulation may have created the conditions for a "perfect litigation storm," according to a May 2013 client memo from law firm Jones Day. The firm's memo posits that new powers granted to the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), successor to the Financial Services Authority, coupled with new self-help remedies for investors and consumers, and new ways to finance litigation could prompt a dramatic increase in legal cases brought against UK financial firms. 
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Sunday, April 28, 2013

The Truth About Securities Class Action Lawsuits is in the Numbers

Author: David Schwartz J.D. CPA

Stanford law professor Michael Klausner, and his colleagues Jason Hegland and Matthew Goforth, have published an update to their 2011 studies reporting data on the timing of dismissals and settlements in securities class actions.  In this latest update published in the April 2012 PLUS Journal, the authors address the factors that affect the timing of securities class action lawsuit dismissals and that affect the timing and size of securities suit settlements.

Klausner, Hegland, and Goforth's analysis uses statistics derived from all securities class actions filed between 2006 and 2010, 82% of which have been resolved one way or another, and 18% are still open.  The sample size consisted of 653 cases, of which 253 have settled, 206 were dismissed with prejudice (preventing their refiling), 74 were voluntarily dropped by the plaintiffs, and 119 are ongoing.  The authors followed the progress of each case through the motion to dismiss stage, and their analysis reveals some interesting trends in these class action securities cases. Chief among their findings is that more than 50% of all securities class action lawsuits “end well before discovery and before even a second complaint is filed,” and just under 60% settle during the discovery phase.

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