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Real Estate Biggest Deals 2011: Multi-Family
Stock-fraud suits take big dip in 2009
Securities-fraud class action lawsuits fell 24 percent in 2009 as litigation related to the credit crunch, and especially subprime-mortgage losses, began to dry up, according to a study. "That pig has moved through the python," Stanford Law School Professor Joseph Grundfest said of the financial traumas that helped trigger the recession.Local firms suit up for subprime
AS SUBPRIME LOSSES escalate, two local plaintiffs' firms, Page Perry and Chitwood Harley Harnes, have filed arbitration demands and a shareholder class action, respectively, against investment firms.Nationally, subprime-related litigation is starting to swell, but the small number of Atlanta plaintiffs' firms that handle securities litigation limits local suits.GCs Making More Money Than Ever
As corporate scandals and the Sarbanes-Oxley reform law have increased GCs' visibility and duties, Fortune 500 companies have been reminded that their chief legal officers are crucial to their businesses. And they're putting their money where their mouths are: Most of the GCs on Corporate Counsel's compensation survey are making more in salary and bonus than ever before.View more book results for the query "Related Cos"
Mortgage bonds show limits to Fed's rate twist: credit markets
The bond market is signaling interest rates on new U.S. home loans may struggle to fall further after reaching record lows in response to the Federal Reserve's decision to buy more government-backed mortgage debt.Bank overhaul bill has plenty of rules and critics
To keep taxpayers from having to bail out giant banks again, lawmakers faced two choices: design rules to try to prevent them from failing, or shrink them so that if they do fail, they won't threaten the financial system.Rating Agencies: Civil Liability Past and Future
Jonathan S. Sack and Stephen M. Juris, principals at Morvillo, Abramowitz, Grand, Iason, Anello & Bohrer, write that credit rating agencies have come under fire in recent months for their perceived contribution to the subprime mortgage "meltdown" and for failing to change their ratings until after that meltdown was well under way.Trending Stories
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