By Alaina Lancaster | March 19, 2021
The order could be a signpost for rulings in several similar shareholder derivative suits filed in the last year seeking court orders compelling companies such as Oracle, Qualcomm and Cisco to diversify their leadership and board structures.
By Stephen Blake | March 2, 2021
Observers anticipate a growing number of lawsuits related to SPACs over the next several years. These lawsuits will have many similarities to traditional securities and M&A litigation, but will also develop their own rubrics given the unique features of the SPAC model, says Stephen Blake of Simpson Thacher & Bartlett.
By Dan Roe | March 1, 2021
The San Diego firm's 2020 was an amalgam of prevailing trends in the Am Law 200: Layoffs in spring, a $5.5 million PPP loan, and surprisingly resilient clients that came through for a year of record revenue and 27% more income.
By C. Ryan Barber | February 16, 2021
Lawyers from Dechert, Akin Gump, Zuckerman Spaeder, Debevoise, Kirkland and Quinn are among the firms counseling parties ahead of the U.S. House hearing this week in the GameStop matter.
By Ellen Bardash | February 5, 2021
Robinhood's customers, not shareholders, are currently the ones upset with the company to the point of taking legal action over January's run on GameStop and other stocks.
By Michael A. Mora | January 28, 2021
Should the Securities and Exchange Commission move from its position of "actively monitoring" to investigating regulatory concerns, it could justify a move from Robinhood to halt trading.
By Ross Todd | January 27, 2021
A federal judge found plaintiffs hadn't alleged that real estate finance company Velocity Financial could have known the extent of the coronavirus pandemic at the time of its January 2020 IPO—meaning there was no need for any disclosures about the pandemic.
By Lucy Wang, Joseph E. Floren, Bob O'Leary and Josh Rapoport | December 11, 2020
Federal forum provisions remain an attractive tool that companies should consider in an effort to avoid the costs and uncertainty of duplicative class actions.
By Ellen Bardash | December 2, 2020
The complaint claims company executives and board members knew about a manufacturing defect while touting progress on new chip development.
By Tom McParland | November 18, 2020
According to a study from San Francisco-based Cornerstone Research, the number of SEC actions aimed at public firms trading on a major stock exchange declined from a record-high 95 in the previous fiscal year, hitting their lowest levels since 2014.
Presented by BigVoodoo
The Legal Intelligencer honors lawyers leaving a mark on the legal community in Pennsylvania and Delaware.
Consulting Magazine recognizes leaders in technology across three categories Leadership, Client Service and Innovation.
Celebrate outstanding achievement in law firms, chambers, in-house legal departments and alternative business structures.
Truly exceptional Bergen County New Jersey Law Firm is growing and seeks strong plaintiff's personal injury Attorney with 5-7 years plaintif...
Epstein Becker & Green is seeking an associate to joins its Commercial Litigation practice in our Columbus or Cincinnati offices. Ca...
Job Opportunity: Location: Prestigious Florida Law Firm seeks to hire a Business attorney with at least 5 years of experience for their Ft. ...
MELICK & PORTER, LLP PROMOTES CONNECTICUT PARTNERS HOLLY ROGERS, STEVEN BANKS, and ALEXANDER AHRENS