Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Exchange Commission"


25 mentions found


CNN —As the conservative Supreme Court majority has won case after case in recent days, liberal dissenters are having their moment in the courtroom. Other justices stared out at spectators or down at notes, perhaps anticipating the next opinions, and dissents, to be revealed. The court majority reversed a 1984 milestone that required judges to defer to reasonable agency interpretations of their congressional mandates. Her oral dissent lasted nearly 15 minutes, about five minutes longer than Roberts’ rendition of the majority opinion. They begin with the author of the majority opinion delivering the facts of the case, law involved, and the resolution.
Persons: Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Neil Gorsuch, Sotomayor, , , ” Gorsuch, John Roberts, Kagan, Roberts, They’ve, Kagan’s, ” Kagan, Roe, Wade, Gorsuch, Sotomayor’s, Antonin Scalia, Jackson, Amy Coney Barrett, Barrett, improvidently, Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, ” Alito, Biden, chiding Organizations: CNN, Friday, Natural Resources Defense, , Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC, US Justice Department, Labor, Conservative Locations: Oregon, Grants, American, Idaho
Crypto firm Consensys has been added to the SEC's list of targets, as the regulator continues its industrywide crackdown. "Consensys violated the federal securities laws by failing to register as a broker and failing to register the offer and sale of certain securities," the court filing alleges. In April, Consensys, which provides blockchain software, tried to preempt the SEC's action with its own lawsuit, alleging overreach on the part of the regulator. The 10-year-old company said its suit followed three subpoenas issued last year, plus a Wells notice from the SEC that claimed Consensys was violating federal securities laws. Consensys said in an emailed statement Friday that the action is part of an "anti-crypto agenda" at the SEC.
Persons: Crypto, Consensys, overreach, Wells Organizations: Securities, Exchange Commission, SEC, Ethereum Locations: Brooklyn , New York, Consensys
Then, according to Hockett, the case would be heard by an administrative court. Straight to federal court. "These two rulings largely amputate the two most important arms that our regulatory agencies use every day in overseeing our industrial economy," Hockett said. AdvertisementIn overturning the Chevron doctrine in a 6-3 decision, the high court has hamstrung federal agencies' regulatory powers. Panuccio said that he supported the decisions and called them "important checks on administrative power."
Persons: , Elena Kagan, Robert Hockett, SCOTUS, Friday's, Hockett, John Roberts, Roberts, Jonathan Siegel, Siegel, Jarkesy, It's, Rachel Weintraub, Weintraub, Jesse Panuccio, Trump, Panuccio Organizations: Service, United States, Securities, Exchange, Business, Cornell University, Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, Chevron, Natural Resources Defense Council, SEC, George Washington University, Coalition, Sensible Locations: North America
Read previewThe Supreme Court dealt a blow to the US Securities and Exchange Commission in a ruling Thursday, sharply limiting the way it pursues financial fraud cases. Until Thursday, the SEC had two ways of pursuing fraud cases. Or it could bring an "administrative proceeding" in its own in-house court, where it appoints its own judges and the cases have no juries. They handle all sorts of cases, not just financial fraud. Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who wrote the dissenting opinion, wrote that the majority decision disrespected the separation of powers between the different branches of government.
Persons: , John Roberts, Roberts, Dodd, Frank, George Jarkesy Jr, Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Sotomayor Organizations: Service, US Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC, Business, US Senate, Department of Labor, Occupational Safety, Health Administration Locations: United States
The Supreme Court on Thursday rejected one of the primary ways the Securities and Exchange Commission enforces laws against securities fraud. The S.E.C.’s practice, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. wrote for a six-justice majority in a decision divided along ideological lines, violated the right to a jury trial. “A defendant facing a fraud suit has the right to be tried by a jury of his peers before a neutral adjudicator,” the chief justice wrote. The case is one of several challenges this term to the power of administrative agencies, long a target of the conservative legal movement. The court last month rejected a challenge to the constitutionality of the way the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is funded.
Persons: John G, Roberts, , , Chevron Organizations: Securities and Exchange, Consumer Financial
People line up to get into the U.S. Supreme Court on the day where decisions ares expected to be handed down, in Washington, U.S., June 26, 2024. WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Thursday put new limits on the power of the Securities and Exchange Commission to enforce securities laws — the latest ruling in a series of cases that take aim at federal agencies. The court ruled 6-3 that adjudication of cases by in-house judges violates the right to trial by jury. The challenge zeroed in on how the SEC enforces securities laws, including those prohibiting insider trading. A three-judge panel of the New Orleans-based 5th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruled against the agency, prompting the SEC to ask the Supreme Court to intervene.
Persons: WASHINGTON —, George Jarkesy, Elon Musk, Mark Cuban Organizations: U.S, Supreme, WASHINGTON, Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC, Circuit U.S Locations: Washington , U.S, New Orleans
Shares of Trump Media & Technology Group closed up nearly 8% on Wednesday, adding to the stock's post-sell-off rally. Trump Media, which trades under the ticker "DJT," plummeted nearly 50% in the three weeks following the felony conviction of former President Donald Trump, Trump Media's majority shareholder. Shares of Trump Media closed at $26.75 last Thursday, its lowest level since April, but began rebounding on Friday. Trump Media, the parent company of social media platform Truth Social, started publicly trading on March 26 after merging with a special purpose acquisition company. The former president owns a nearly 65% stake in Trump Media, but he cannot sell any of his 114,750,000 shares until a postmerger lock-up period ends in late September.
Persons: Donald Trump, — Trump Organizations: Trump Media & Technology Group, Trump Media, Trump, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, Social Locations: Thursday's
The Vinfast VF6 all-electric vehicle is on display at the 2022 Los Angeles Auto Show on Nov. 18, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. Vietnamese automaker VinFast, for a short time the third-most valuable car company in the world, has a big problem: It just can't sell enough cars. Designed specifically for the Vietnamese and other Asian markets, the VF3 is priced for "mass appeal," according to VinFast. VinFast's future matters for Vietnam, both because its ambitions dovetail with the Communist Party's own goals, and because of parent company Vingroup's large role in the Vietnamese economy. "We will never let VinFast go," he told Vingroup shareholders at their annual general meeting in April, according to state media.
Persons: Le Thi, VinFast, It's, Vingroup, Pham Nhat Vuong, Tu Le Organizations: Angeles Auto, Nasdaq, General Motors Corp, Ford Motor Co, Communist, Vingroup's, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, Sino Locations: Los Angeles , California, Le, U.S, VinFast, North Carolina, California, Vietnam, Ukraine, Asia
"Wire $300,000 dollars to bitcoin account within 12 hours," the email to Kirkhorn added, according to the incident report. The case was ultimately suspended and no arrest was ever made, according to the incident report and Dark. AdvertisementSome Tesla workers told BI that tight production deadlines and the intensity of the work could sometimes create a high-pressure environment. We were just standing outside the building waiting to go back to work," one worker, who was there during the ordeal, told BI. The sheriff's office told local news at the time that the building was cleared and there was "nothing to substantiate the presence of a shooter at all."
Persons: , Elon Musk, Musk, Tesla, Zachary Kirkhorn, Zachary Kirkhorn —, Austin Gigafactory, Kirkhorn, Travis, Kristen Dark, SUZANNE CORDEIRO, Austin, Joe Biden, Justin Mathew McCauley of, McCauley's, McCauley, Justin Sullivan, they'd, Apu Gomes, X, Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg, Meta, Sheryl Sandberg, John Lennon Organizations: Service, Business, Securities, Exchange Commission, BI, YouTube, Tesla's, Tesla, Street Journal, Office, Musk, FOX, Austin, Factory, Getty, Elon, SEC, Meta, Twitter, BBC Locations: Austin, Travis, Texas, Nigeria, Justin Mathew McCauley of Minnesota, Minnesota, Fremont , California, Tesla's, Sparks , Nevada, Nevada
The highest-paid CEOs don't all lead the world's biggest companies. On Monday, C-Suite Comp published its list of the highest-paid CEOs of 2023 based on "total compensation granted," a measure that includes executives' salaries, bonuses, perks and stock options, among other factors. CEOs often receive restricted stock or options as a significant part of their compensation, the value of which can fluctuate based on the company's performance and market conditions. This new measure of executive earnings, dubbed "compensation actually paid" under SEC rules, is designed to help stakeholders better understand how executive pay aligns with the company's financial performance. Here's how much the U.S.'s best-paid CEOs are being awarded, as of 2023:
Organizations: Apple, Blackstone, Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC Locations: U.S
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: SolarEdge Technologies — Shares of the company tumbled more than 20% following the announcement that it will offer $300 million worth of convertible notes due 2029. — The stock plunged more than 7% after the company updated its earnings guidance for the full year on Monday after the bell. The wholesale pool supplies distributor expects full-year earnings between $11.04 and $11.44 per share. Carnival — Shares added nearly 8% after the cruise company posted a second-quarter earnings and revenue beat. Penn Entertainment — The casino operator and online gambling platform's stock fell 5% after Raymond James downgraded it to market perform from outperform.
Persons: Leslie's, LSEG, Raymond James, Enovix, Rivian, , Alex Harring, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound Organizations: U.S . Securities, Exchange, Pool Corp, Carnival, Penn Entertainment, Airbus, Nvidia —, Novo Nordisk, Guggenheim, Spirit AeroSystems, Boeing, Bloomberg Locations: Singapore, France, China
The Supreme Court’s right-wing supermajority talks a lot about the importance of history and tradition in deciding cases. The decision, in Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy, struck down the S.E.C.’s use of in-house judges to bring enforcement actions against securities fraud. If the agency wants to go after securities fraud, it will have to go to federal court. When a lawsuit involves the protection of rights of the public generally, juries have never been required. Its impact will reach far beyond securities fraud, hamstringing similar tribunals in agencies responsible for the environment, public health, food and consumer safety, worker protections and much more.
Persons: , Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Ketanji Brown Jackson Organizations: Securities, Exchange Commission
A sweep of the executive and legislative branches by either Democrats or Republicans in the November election could spell more risk to crypto assets, according to TD Cowen. "Divided government is the best possible outcome for financial firms, housing and crypto as we believe there would be bipartisan legislative and regulatory agreements that could survive future political changes," TD Cowen's Jaret Seiberg wrote in a note Monday. "If Biden wins, a Republican Senate could limit his ability to put aggressive regulators in power," Seiberg added. "Trump would likely have a GOP Senate, but House Democrats could block his legislative agenda. Republican politicians have tended to hold more crypto-friendly views, but the digital currency industry maintains that crypto is a nonpartisan issue.
Persons: TD Cowen, Jaret Seiberg, Seiberg, Trump, Donald Trump, Biden, Biden's, Gary Gensler, Gensler, Michael Bloom Organizations: Republicans, Biden, Republican, GOP Senate, Innovation, Technology, Republican Senate, TD Cowen's Washington Research Group, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission Locations: Washington
Shares of Trump Media soared more than 20% on Monday morning, as the firm majority-owned by former President Donald Trump sought to bounce back from a weekslong plunge that cut the stock price nearly in half. Trump Media, which trades as DJT on the Nasdaq, was trading around $33 a share on much higher than average volume as of 10:50 a.m. Shares of Trump Media sunk even lower last week, after its registration of additional shares was declared effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Trump posts almost exclusively on Truth Social, the microblogging social media platform that is Trump Media's sole product to date. But Trump in early June joined the social media behemoth TikTok, whose traffic dwarfs that of Truth Social.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, TikTok Organizations: Trump Media, Nasdaq, Truth, Securities and Exchange Commission, Trump Locations: Warsaw, Poland, York
Shein, the fast fashion giant with links to China, has confidentially filed for a public listing in London as it faces backlash in the U.S., a person familiar with the matter told CNBC. Elected officials in the U.S. have repeatedly expressed concerns about the use of forced labor in Shein's supply chain and its use of a U.S. tax law exemption known as de minimis. Shein would still prefer to go public in the U.S., sources previously told CNBC, and its filing in London doesn't mean that an IPO will happen there. It's unclear if Beijing has signed off on the London listing. Shein's London filing marks another twist in the company's so-far long road to a public markets debut.
Persons: Shein, It's, Donald Tang, — CNBC's Sara Salinas Organizations: CNBC, U.S, National Retail Federation, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, Wall Street Journal, SEC Locations: China, London, U.S, Beijing, Singapore, Xinjiang
New York CNN —Retail software provider CDK Global says it will likely take several days for its software to be back online and operational, as the company grapples with a system outage that has paralyzed nearly 15,000 car dealerships across North America since Wednesday. The data provider’s software, which dealerships use to manage everything from scheduling to records, said Saturday it has begun restoring its software. Car manufacturer Ford told CNN it is working with dealers to set up alternative software systems and other workarounds. Several dealerships on the East Coast told CNN on Sunday they are manually filling out forms to process sales. One used car dealership told CNN it has been filing paperwork by hand and sending runners to the car registry with the paperwork.
Persons: CDK, Mike Stanton, Ford, they’re Organizations: New, New York CNN — Retail, CDK, CNN, Bloomberg, Dealers, National Automobile Dealers Association, East Coast, Sunday, Securities and Exchange Commission, Penske Automotive, Premier Trucking Group, Penske, SEC, Sonic Automotive, Premier Truck Locations: New York, North America, Eastern European, CDK, United States
Activist Commentary: Starboard is a very successful activist investor and has extensive experience helping companies focus on operational efficiency and margin improvement. With 90%+ gross margins and 35% operating margins, Autodesk is a leader in AEC software. Further, its operating margins are not much worse than those of its peers at first blush. However, Starboard correctly does not judge the company's operating margins on the mean of its peer set, but by the potential embodied in its gross margins and market position. He no longer serves on the board of Autodesk, but he could certainly be an informal advisor to Starboard – or a cautionary tale for Autodesk.
Persons: Max, Russell, Deborah Clifford, Clifford, bode, Sachem, Andrew Anagnost, designees, Rick Hill, Hill, designee, Ken Squire Organizations: Autodesk, Engineering, Manufacturing, Media, Entertainment, Manufacturing Solutions, Wonder, Delaware Chancery, , U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, Delaware Court, Marvell Technology, Symantec, 13D Locations: Delaware, Autodesk's
What's next: Media Matters filed a motion to dismiss Musk's lawsuit in March, but a judge has yet to rule. VCG/GettyGovernment lawsuits and investigationsSEC investigation into Musk's Twitter takeoverThe issues: The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating Elon Musk's Twitter purchase. Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty ImagesPersonal lawsuits against MuskTornetta v. MuskThe issues: Tesla shareholder Richard Tornetta sued Musk and Tesla in a class action lawsuit regarding Musk's compensation package, which was worth $55.8 billion at the time. Several lawsuits also allege Musk discriminated against them because of their race, gender, or disability in choosing to fire them. The executives were set to receive golden parachutes, but claim Musk and X have not paid them out.
Persons: , Elon Musk, Musk, Claire Boucher, Grimes, Alex Spiro, Sam Altman, Donald Trump, Spiro, Anna Webber, Angelo Carusone, What's, Gina Carano, Schaerr Jaffe, Tesla, Musk's, Elon, SEC hasn't, Elon Musk's, who've, Owen Diaz, Matt Winkelmeyer, Richard Tornetta, Kimbal Musk, He's, Boucher, Benjamin Brody, Brody, Brody reverberated, Ben Brody, didn't, Robert Kaiden, Kaiden, he's, Agrawal, Parag Agrawal, Ned Segal, Twitter Vijaya Gadde, Sean Edgett, Segal, hadn't Organizations: Service, SpaceX, Business, OpenAI, SEC, Trump, Trump —, Elon, Variety, Media, X Corp, Disney, National Labor Relations Board, UAW, Tesla, Getty Government, Twitter, Securities, Exchange Commission, Justice Department, Reuters, Traffic, Administration, NHTSA, Apple, NLRB, Musk's SpaceX, US, Employment Opportunity, Musk, Nazi, Litigation Locations: Texas, Texas and Missouri, America, Nazi Germany, California, Delaware, San Francisco
Trump Media shares are in free fall
  + stars: | 2024-06-21 | by ( Matt Egan | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +3 min
New York CNN —Truth Social owner Trump Media & Technology Group has gone ice-cold. The weeks-long selloff accelerated in recent days as Trump Media announced it received approval from regulators for a move that threatens to water down the holdings of shareholders. The problem is that even after the recent selloff, Trump Media is still valued in the billions of dollars, and yet it generates very little revenue. Not only that, but Truth Social remains a tiny player in social media, dwarfed by Elon Musk’s X (formerly Twitter), Reddit and even Instagram’s Threads. “Today marks another milestone for Truth Social,” Trump Media CEO Devin Nunes said in a statement on Tuesday.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Jay Ritter, Elon Musk’s, Matthew Kennedy, that’s, Kennedy, Devin Nunes, Ritter, Trump Organizations: New, New York CNN, Truth, Trump Media & Technology Group, Trump, Trump Media, University of Florida, Renaissance, GameStop, AMC, Securities and Exchange Commission, ” Trump Media Locations: New York
Under Armour on Friday said it has agreed to pay $434 million to settle a 2017 class action lawsuit accusing the sports apparel maker of defrauding shareholders about its revenue growth in order to meet Wall Street forecasts. The shareholder lawsuit accused the apparel maker and CEO Kevin Plank of intentionally misleading them about the company’s financial health. In 2021, the Baltimore-based company had agreed to pay $9 million to settle Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charges that it misled investors about its revenue growth. Under Armour said it intends to pay the settlement amount of $434 million through cash on hand as well as by drawing on its $1.1 billion revolving credit facility. The company expects its total accrual in legal proceeding contingencies related to the lawsuit to reach $434 million during the first quarter of fiscal year 2025, from $100 million at the end of fiscal 2024.
Persons: Armour, averts, Kevin Plank, Mark Solomon, Robbins Geller Rudman, Dowd Organizations: Securities, Exchange Commission, SEC Locations: Baltimore
Experts say Shein's U.S. IPO is all but dead
  + stars: | 2024-06-21 | by ( Ece Yildirim | In Ecedyildirim | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
The Shein logo can be seen on a smartphone, while the Chinese online retailer's website is open on a laptop. China-founded e-commerce company Shein's hopes of going public in the United States are growing slimmer by the day, according to experts, as rising tensions between Beijing and the U.S. roil business and trade. A London IPO could, in theory, be easier than a U.S. offering, according to Bochanis. If Shein's London IPO succeeds, it is unlikely to keep pursuing a U.S. offering, said University of Florida finance professor Jay Ritter, who studies IPOs. It became one of the first prominent Chinese companies to do so in the U.S. even as the Biden administration has increasingly cracked down on Chinese-made electric vehicles.
Persons: Shein's, confidentially, Angelo Bochanis, Bochanis, Jay Ritter, Zeekr, Biden Organizations: U.S, National Retail Federation, CNBC, TJX Companies, UBS, Target, Walmart, Renaissance, Securities and Exchange Commission, London Stock, University of Florida Locations: China, United States, Beijing, U.S, London
Trump Media shares sink 12% as DJT slide accelerates
  + stars: | 2024-06-20 | by ( Kevin Breuninger | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
A sell-off of Trump Media picked up speed Thursday, with shares of former President Donald Trump's company falling as much as 15% shortly after the opening bell. The company behind the conservative social media app Truth Social, which trades on the Nasdaq as DJT, was hovering around $27 per share at the market's open. That price is more than 40% lower than it stood at the start of June, when Trump Media stock cost just over $49 a share. The slide represents a massive on-paper loss for Trump, the majority owner of Trump Media. After the bell, Trump Media revealed that the SEC had declared its registration statement effective.
Persons: Donald Trump, Donald Trump's Organizations: Trump Media, Nasdaq, Trump, New, Securities, Exchange, SEC Locations: Washington ,, New York
Trump Media & Technology Group — After former President Donald Trump's company said on Tuesday that the Securities and Exchange Commission had declared effective Trump Media's registration of additional shares, the stock dropped 13.5%. Super Micro Computer — Shares jumped 5% after Elon Musk said the company will help his AI firm, xAI, build a supercomputer . Winnebago reported $1.13 in adjusted earnings per share on $786 million of revenue for its fiscal third quarter. Commercial Metals — Shares gained 5.6% after the company reported a revenue beat for its third quarter. Analysts surveyed by LSEG had forecasted $1.80 earnings per share and $1.65 billion in revenue.
Persons: lenacapavir, Donald Trump's, Elon Musk, Piper Sandler, Winnebago, FactSet, Heather Balsky, Jabil, LSEG, , Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound, Lisa Han Organizations: Accenture, Gilead Sciences, Trump Media & Technology, Securities and Exchange Commission, Trump, Darden, Garden, LongHorn, LSEG . Revenue, Winnebago Industries, Bank of America, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Metals, Revenue, KB
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell: Accenture — The tech stock jumped 8.6%. While Accenture missed earnings and revenue expectations in its latest quarter, according to FactSet, the information technology company posted more than $900 million in new generative AI bookings. Trump Media & Technology Group — Shares tumbled nearly 12% after the company on Tuesday said that its registration of additional shares was declared effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Dell Technologies , Super Micro Computer — Shares jumped more than 4% each. Advanced Micro Devices — Shares added about 1% after Piper Sandler called the semiconductor stock a top pick among large caps.
Persons: Elon Musk, Dell, Musk, LSEG, Piper Sandler, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Accenture, Trump Media & Technology, Securities and Exchange Commission, Nvidia, Microsoft, Dell Technologies, xAI, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Juniper Networks, Juniper, KB
New York CNN —Airbnb has undermined users’ safety by scaling back its work to remove extremists from its platform, a former contractor alleged in a new whistleblower complaint. “Airbnb spent much of 2023 scaling back and undermining the work of its team tasked with removing individuals affiliated with dangerous and extremist organizations from the platform,” Whistleblower Aid, the organization representing Hernandez, said in a statement. Airbnb disputed Hernandez’s claims, saying that it continues to enforce against members of dangerous or extremist organizations. And in the following years, it pointed to that pledge when removing users associated with extremist organizations. Prior to her work at Airbnb, Hernandez worked as a researcher for the Terrorism Research and Analysis Consortium, an organization that tracks terrorist and hate groups, according to Whistleblower Aid.
Persons: New York CNN — Airbnb, Jess Hernandez, “ Airbnb, Hernandez, ” Hernandez, Airbnb, we’ve, , Brian Chesky, , Lauren Southern Organizations: New, New York CNN, Capitol, US Securities and Exchange Commission, Federal Trade Commission, NBC, CNN, White, Washington DC, Fox News, Terrorism Research, Consortium Locations: New York, Charlottesville , Virginia, Airbnb
Total: 25