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Securities Litigation News

May 18, 2012

ThomsonReuters | May 18, 2012
The key detail in the two securities fraud complaints filed so far against JPMorgan Chase isn't that CEO Jamie Dimon told analysts that news reports about the bank's risky credit default swap position were a "tempest in a teapot." Even though that's the statement both complaints pinpoint as best evidence so far of the bank's alleged deception, to understand the shape this litigation is likely to take, you have to check out the class period both complaints assert. It's unusually short for a securities class action, beginning on April 13 -- when Dimon made the fateful "tempest" comment -- and ending on May 10, the day the bank disclosed losses of $2 billion in CDS trades, with more to come.
ThomsonReuters | May 18, 2012
Charles Schwab Corp plans to wait until the end of a disciplinary proceeding before enforcing a change in its customer agreement requiring investors to give up class action rights, a spokeswoman said on Thursday.

May 17, 2012

Wall Street Journal | May 17, 2012
Two shareholder lawsuits were filed late Tuesday against J.P. Morgan Chase Co. and its top executives over the revelation last week that the bank had suffered more than $2 billion in trading losses.
American Lawyer | May 17, 2012
It's time to confront the third rail of shareholder litigation. It's time to ask officers and directors to dig into their own pockets to settle shareholders suits.

May 16, 2012

American Lawyer | May 16, 2012
Bank of America shareholders who want to scuttle a proposed $20 million settlement of derivative claims arising from the bank's acquisition of Merrill Lynch have been thwarted again. On Monday U.S. District Judge P. Kevin Castel in Manhattan, who must decide whether to approve the settlement, rejected requests by the objectors to intervene and replace the lead plaintiffs and their counsel.
D & O Diary | May 16, 2012
In the wake of JP Morgan Chase’s startling news last week of its $2 billion trading loss, and of the equaling startling statements of Jamie DImon, the bank’s CEO, that the losing trades were, among other things, "flawed, complex, poorly reviewed, poorly executed, and poorly monitored," there has been speculation whether these disclosures would lead to litigation. In particular, commentators have asked whether Dimon’s candid statements would hurt the company in any litigation that might arise.

May 15, 2012

Forbes | May 15, 2012
A Google search this morning doesn’t turn up a securities lawsuit against JP Morgan over its $2 billion trading miscue, but give the lawyers time. They’ll sue, and the question is whether JPMorgan Chief Jamie Dimon‘s very public apologies will give class-action lawyers fuel for a very lucrative settlement, or make it harder for them to win.
National Law Journal | May 15, 2012
Congress is sure to hold hearings on how and why JPMorgan Chase lost $2 billion in hedge fund trading and what safeguards might prevent it from repeating, including testimony from federal banking regulators and the company's chief executive Jamie Dimon, financial regulation lawyers say.

May 10, 2012

Business Insider | May 10, 2012
SEC Disagrees with Supreme Court’s Anti-U.S. Investor Morrison Decision and Favors Clearly Defined Private Right of Action against Foreign Wrongdoers, rather than Abolition of U.S. Investors’ Legal Rights, SEC Staff Study Asserts.

May 2, 2012

D & O Diary | May 2, 2012
A great deal of the analysis of securities class action lawsuit settlements revolves around measures of aggregate, average and median settlement amounts. These data, while useful, are relatively unhelpful in trying to anticipate the outcome of any particular case, particularly at the outset.