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Investor Lawyers Blog

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Houston Broker at Deutsche Bank Alex Brown Leaves Suicide Note Suggesting Clients Sue over Aravali Fund

Tales of the stock market crash of 1929 contain images of victims jumping from windows of Wall Street buildings. An eerily sign of the similarities to the current 21st Century crash may be the recent suicide of a despondent broker at Deutsche Bank Alex Brown Securities (Deutsche Bank), who left…

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Merrill Settles SEC Charges Over ‘Squawk Box’ Misuse for $7 Million

Merrill Lynch will pay $7 million to settle Securities and Exchange Commission administrative charges that the investment bank neglected to protect customers whose orders were transmitted over “squawk boxes.” The penalty is the second highest fine that the SEC has imposed for cases involving Section 15(f) of the 1934 Securities…

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Wachovia Securities Must Pay Texas $4 Million for Auction-Rate Securities

The Texas State Securities Board has fined Wachovia Securities $4 million for misleading investors about auction-rate securities. The Wells Fargo & Co unit must also have completed buying back ARS from investor clients in Texas by June 30. This is the final step in the auction-rate securities case against Wachovia…

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Stifel Nicolaus Will Repurchase Auction-Rate Securities from Costumers Within Three Years

Stifel Financial Corp says that subsidiary Stifel Nicolaus & Co. Inc. will buy back all of its customers’ auction-rate securities in the next three years. This is a significant change from its initial offer to purchase 10% of the clients’ ARS holdings. The ARS repurchase will occur in four stages:…

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Madoff and Stanford Victims Can Claim Theft Losses as Tax Deductions, Says Internal Revenue Service

According to Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Douglas Shulman, investors who were defrauded by R Allen Stanford and Bernard Madoff can claim these theft losses as deductions when filing their taxes. The IRS announced these new procedures on Tuesday. These new IRS rules are applicable to victims of any Ponzi scam…

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Despite Financial Market Volatility, Most Investment Advisors Are Telling Clients To Stick With Their Investment Plans

According to a TD Ameritrade Institutional survey, most investment advisers continue to tell their clients that now is a great time to invest in the financial market rather than encouraging them to cash out their investments in the wake of the financial crisis: • 93% of investment advisers are not…

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Morgan Keegan Settlement with Children’s Wish Fund Shows the Impact Recouping Investment Losses Can Have On The Little People

In 2007, Morgan Keegan settled an arbitration claim with the Indiana Children’s Wish Fund for an undisclosed amount. The charity had reported losing $48,000 in a mutual fund it had invested in with the brokerage firm. The Wish Fund became involved in mortgage securities after a local banker persuaded the…

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Moody’s Investors Can Pursue Securities Fraud Class Action Lawsuit Accusing the Credit Rating Agency of Falsely Claiming Independence

A US District Court judge says Moody’s Corp. investors can go ahead in part with a lawsuit accusing the credit rating agency of securities fraud. The class action lawsuit accuses Moody’s of claiming it was an independent body that impartially published accurate financial instrument ratings when such misrepresentations artificially inflated…

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UBS Sanctioned For Madoff-Related Losses by Luxembourg Financial Services Regulator

In Europe, the Luxembourg Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF) has censured UBS’s Luxembourg-based branch for failing to execute due diligence and, as a result, allegedly allowing for the massive losses investors have incurred from the Bernard Madoff’s $50 billion Ponzi scam. The Luxembourg financial service regulator is accusing…

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Outcome of SEC Actions Appear to Favor Larger Broker-Dealers than Smaller Ones, Says Harvard Law School Study

The Securities and Exchange Commission may be “too close” to larger investment firms that they give them preferential treatment in SEC Actions, says a Harvard Law School study. One “tentative” explanation cited by the study is that SEC officials look to the larger broker-dealers-especially those located in New York-for future…

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