Wednesday, January 11, 2006

Sarbanes Oxley May Be Reviving Shareholder Class-Action "Strike" Suits


At first glance, the study from Stanford University and Cornerstone Research seems to be good news, noting that the number of class-action suits filed in 2005 dropped to 176 from 213 in 2004 — a 17% decrease. Good-governance types are claiming this decline is a direct result of the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley legislation working as intended, keeping companies on the straight and narrow.

Yet as any first-year Wall Street analyst knows, this minor legal reprieve is better attributed to last year’s relatively stable stock market. Class-action suits arise out of booms and busts in equity markets: As share prices dive, plaintiffs’ lawyers swarm. Yet with last year’s stock market less volatile than at any point since 1996, the “strike suit” pickings were lean.

See full Article.