July marks the four year anniversary of the implementation of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The law, which was passed by the Obama administration with the intent to prevent the recurrence of events that caused the 2008 financial crises, has been a divisive issue in Washington and Wall Street since its initiation.
Increasing Russian Sanctions Target Financial and Energy Sectors
On July 16, the U.S. government further expanded the sanctions imposed in response to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision to reclaim the Crimean Peninsula as a part of the Russian Federation. These expanded sanctions include the introduction of the Sectoral Sanctions Identifications List (SSI List), which restricts financial transactions with certain entities that operate in the financial and energy sectors of the Russian economy, as identified by the U.S. Treasury Secretary pursuant to Executive Order 13662.1 The new sanctions represent a significant escalation in the tensions between Russia and the United States and target large banks, energy, and defense firms.
DOJ Launches Forex Probe
In a recent announcement, the Department of Justice, along with the FBI have begun investing the alleged rigging and manipulation of the foreign exchange (“FX”) market. The FBI is already “looking into alleged rigging of interest rates associated with the London interbank offered rate, or Libor.”
SEC Staff Provides Guidance on Custody Rule Compliance When Private Funds Use SPVs and Escrow Accounts
The staff of the SEC’s Division of Investment Management issued IM Guidance Update No. 2014-7 (the “Guidance Update”) to provide guidance on how Rule 206(4)-2 under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (the “Custody Rule”) applies when private pooled investment vehicles (“private funds”) use special purpose vehicles (“SPVs”) to own one or more assets or use escrow accounts in connection with the sale of a portfolio company.
Update: Comcast and Time Warner Cable Merger
Two months ago, we reported on the Comcast and Time Warner Cable merger. At the time, Comcast had expressed confidence in the approval of the merger. However, recent events have commentators speculating whether approval will be as easy as Comcast believed. The infamous Comcast customer service call that has been making the rounds online has come at a very inconvenient time for Comcast, who is in the middle of the merger approval process.
SEC’s MCDC Initiative – The Clock is Ticking
Not-for-profit health care providers that have borrowed on a tax-exempt basis within the last five years should be aware of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) Municipalities Continuing Disclosure Cooperation (“MCDC”) Initiative. The MCDC Initiative applies to municipal issuers and obligated persons, such as tax-exempt hospital borrowers, that provided materially misleading disclosure in Official Statements issued within the past five years regarding compliance with their continuing disclosure obligations under SEC Rule 15c2-12. The SEC is offering to enter into settlements pursuant to which such borrowers neither admit nor deny wrongdoing, but agree to a cease and desist order against future misleading disclosure and agree to certain undertakings, such as remedying all past disclosure failures, cooperating with subsequent SEC investigations, disclosing the settlement terms for five years in Official Statements, and establishing training programs regarding continuing disclosure obligations. However, the MCDC Initiative expires on September 10, 2014. After that date, the SEC has indicated that penalties for such misleading disclosure are likely to be more severe and may include fines.
SEC Suspends CYNK After Shocking Stock Valuation
Last week, the financial world goggled in astonishment at the meteoric rise in the CYNK Technology Corp stock. Cynk, a supposed social-networking company, is a business which appears to have one employee, large losses, no turnover, and no assets. However, what Cynk does have is a $4.5 billion stock market valuation: numbers that clearly don’t add up to the baffled financial world.
Dubai Plans to Build the World’s Largest Mall
Dubai Holding, a global investment company, has unveiled plans to construct the world’s first temperature controlled mini-city, called Mall of the World. The project will “develop the world’s largest mall, largest indoor park, cultural theatres and wellness resorts with a capacity to host over 180 million visitors annually.”
Key Issues in Drafting Indemnification Clauses
Many agreements involving stock or asset purchases contain indemnification clauses – that is, clauses under which one party to the agreement promises to indemnify the other party in the event of future losses arising from the subject of the agreement. Often a contracting party may be tempted simply to cut and paste an indemnification clause contained in a prior contract. But few if any contract terms play a larger role in business litigation than indemnification clauses. As such, whether you represent the buyer or the seller, time spent tailoring your indemnification clause to the specific circumstances of your transaction is time well spent.
SunTrust Agrees to Mortgage Settlement with the Department of Justice
On Thursday, July 3, SunTrust agreed to pay $320 million in a settlement with the Department of Justice (“DOJ”) after an investigation of alleged violations of the Home Affordable Modification Program (“HAMP”). The settlement funds intend to provide relief to borrowers who were adversely affected by SunTrust’s actions; a prevention fund will also be established as a result of the settlement.