Tag Archives: Kristin A. Snyder

Supreme Court Punches SEC APs Right in the Seventh Amendment

by Andrew J. Ceresney, Charu A. Chandrasekhar, Arian M. June, Robert B. Kaplan, Julie M. Riewe, Kristin A. Snyder, and Jonathan R. Tuttle

Photos of the authors

Top left to right: Andrew J. Ceresney, Charu A. Chandrasekhar, Arian M. June, and Robert B. Kaplan. Bottom left to right: Julie M. Riewe, Kristin A. Snyder, and Jonathan R. Tuttle. (Photos courtesy of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP)

Recently, in a long-awaited ruling with significant implications for the securities industry and administrative agencies more generally, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Jarkesy v. SEC, holding that the Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial precluded the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) from pursuing monetary penalties for securities fraud violations through in-house administrative adjudications. The key takeaways are:

  • The Court’s ruling was limited to securities fraud claims, but other SEC claims seeking legal remedies may be impacted, as well as claims by other federal agencies that may have been adjudicated in-house previously.
  • We expect that the SEC will continue its practice of bringing new enforcement actions in district court, except when a claim only is available in the administrative forum.
  • Because of the majority decision’s focus on fraud’s common-law roots, the decision raises questions about whether the SEC may bring negligence-based or strict liability claims seeking penalties administratively.
  • The Court did not resolve other constitutional questions concerning the SEC’s administrative law judges, including whether the SEC’s use of administrative proceedings violates the non-delegation doctrine and whether the SEC’s administrative law judges are unconstitutionally protected from removal in violation of Article III.
  • We anticipate additional litigation regarding these unresolved issues.

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AI Enforcement Starts with Washing: The SEC Charges its First AI Fraud Cases

by Andrew J. Ceresney, Charu A. Chandrasekhar, Avi Gesser, Arian M. June, Robert B. Kaplan, Julie M. Riewe, Jeff Robins, and Kristin A. Snyder

Photos of authors

Top (left to right): Andrew J. Ceresney, Charu A. Chandrasekhar, Avi Gesser, and Arian M. June
Bottom (left to right): Robert B. Kaplan, Julie M. Riewe, Jeff Robins, and Kristin A. Snyder (photos courtesy of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP)

On March 18, 2024, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) announced settled charges against two investment advisers, Delphia (USA) Inc. (“Delphia”) and Global Predictions Inc. (“Global Predictions”) for making false and misleading statements about their alleged use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) in connection with providing investment advice. These settlements are the SEC’s first-ever cases charging violations of the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws in connection with AI disclosures, and also include the first settled charges involving AI in connection with the Marketing and Compliance Rules under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (“Advisers Act”). The matters reflect Chair Gensler’s determination to target “AI washing”—securities fraud in connection with AI disclosures under existing provisions of the federal securities laws—and underscore that public companies, investment advisers and broker-dealers will face rapidly increasing scrutiny from the SEC in connection with their AI disclosures, policies and procedures. We have previously discussed Chair Gensler’s scrutiny of AI washing and AI disclosure risk in Form ADV Part 2A filings. In this client alert, we discuss the charges and AI disclosure and compliance takeaways.

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SEC Issues Long-Awaited Climate-Related Disclosure Rule

by Eric T. Juergens, Benjamin R. Pedersen, Paul M. Rodel, Kristin A. Snyder, Caroline N. Swett, Ulysses Smith, Michael Keene, Mie Morikubo, Michael Pan, Amy Pereira, and Maayan G. Stein

photos of authors

Top left to right: Eric T. Juergens, Benjamin R. Pedersen, Paul M. Rodel, Kristin A. Snyder, Caroline N. Swett, and Ulysses Smith. Bottom left to right: Michael Keene, Mie Morikubo, Michael Pan, Amy Pereira, and Maayan G. Stein. (Photos courtesy of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP).

On March 6, 2024, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) adopted a long-awaited final rule, The Enhancement and Standardization of Climate-Related Disclosures for Investors, which will require registrants, including foreign private issuers (“FPIs”),[1] to disclose extensive climate-related information in their registration statements and periodic reports (the “Final Rule”). The Final Rule is intended to facilitate the disclosure of “complete and decision-useful information about the impacts of climate-related risks on registrants” and to improve “the consistency, comparability, and reliability of climate-related information for investors.” The Final Rule constitutes one of the most significant changes ever to SEC disclosure requirements, and is expected to face legal challenges. The Final Rule is available here and the accompanying fact sheet is available here.

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SEC Proposes Rule to Eliminate or Neutralize Conflicts in the Use of “Predictive Data Analytics” Technologies

by Andrew J. Ceresney, Charu A. Chandrasekhar, Avi Gesser, Jeff Robins, Matt Kelly, Gary E. Murphy, Jarrett Lewis, Robert B. Kaplan, Marc Ponchione, Sheena Paul, Catherine Morrison, Julie M. Riewe, Kristin A. Snyder, and Mengyi Xu

Photos of the authors

Top left to right: Andrew J. Ceresney, Charu A. Chandrasekhar, Avi Gesser, Jeff Robins, Matt Kelly, Gary E. Murphy, and Jarrett Lewis.
Bottom left to right: Robert B. Kaplan, Marc Ponchione, Sheena Paul, Catherine Morrison, Julie M. Riewe, Kristin A. Snyder, and Mengyi Xu.
(Photos courtesy of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP)

On July 26, 2023, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) issued proposed rules (the “Proposed Rules”) that would require broker-dealers and investment advisers (collectively, “firms”) to evaluate their use of predictive data analytics (“PDA”) and other covered technologies in connection with investor interactions and to eliminate or neutralize certain conflicts of interest associated with such use. The Proposed Rules also contain amendments to rules under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934[1] (“Exchange Act”) and the Investment Advisers Act of 1940[2] (“Advisers Act”) that would require firms to have policies and procedures to achieve compliance with the rules and to make and maintain related records.

In this memorandum, we first discuss the scope of the Proposed Rules and provide a summary of key provisions. We also discuss some key implications regarding the scope and application of the rules if adopted as proposed. The full text of the proposal is available here.

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The SEC’s New Risk Alert Warns about the Use of Alternative Data

by Andrew J. CeresneyAvi Gesser, Julie M. Riewe, Kristin A. Snyder, Jonathan R. TuttleCharu A. Chandrasekhar, and Mengyi Xu

On April 26, 2022, the Division of Examinations (“EXAMS”) of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) issued a Risk Alert titled “Investment Adviser MNPI Compliance Issues” (“Risk Alert”) on the use of alternative data.  The Risk Alert outlines EXAMS’ recent observations on compliance deficiencies related to Section 204A of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940—including deficiencies relating to policies and procedures for alternative data—and Rule 204A-1 (the “Code of Ethics Rule”).  Based on the Risk Alert, and the recent SEC enforcement action in this area, we offer three takeaways for investment advisers to reduce their risk when purchasing and using alternative data.

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