Find Lawyers in Vermont, United States for Securities Regulation

Practice Area Overview

A securities regulation practice advises clients who are subject to federal securities laws - broker-dealers, investment advisers, banks, insurance companies, public companies, accounting firms, and institutional investors - on how to comply with those laws, as well as state securities laws, the rules of FINRA and the securities exchanges, and laws and rules related to ERISA, commodities, derivatives, insurance, and banking. Securities regulatory lawyers assist clients in registering new broker-dealers and investment advisers, and in launching investment funds. Public company clients need assistance in drafting periodic public disclosures, responding to SEC disclosure comments and preparing public and private offering documents and proxy statements. Broker-dealer and investment adviser clients request advice on designing and marketing new products and services and in implementing compliance programs.

Clients also need advice in investigations and enforcement actions concerning possible violations of the securities laws. These investigations may be conducted by the SEC, by state securities commissions or attorneys general, FINRA and other self-regulatory organizations (including, for accounting firms, the PCAOB), and federal or state criminal prosecutors. Securities regulatory lawyers may represent individuals or entities in these inquiries, and must often coordinate with other law firms in industry-wide investigations. Securities regulatory lawyers conduct internal investigations for companies or their boards of directors as well as regulatory entities, including individual, class, and derivative actions, and in arbitrations before FINRA, JAMS, AAA, and international arbitration forums.

Securities regulatory lawyers must understand the relevant legal and regulatory issues and the different products and services subject to securities regulation. These products and services include common and preferred stock; corporate, government, agency, municipal and convertible bonds; open-end and closed-end mutual funds; exchange-traded funds and notes; structured products; asset-backed securities; private funds; separately managed accounts; variable annuities; 529 plans; warrants; options; futures; swaps; commodity pools; bank collective trust funds; and insurance separate accounts. Securities regulatory lawyers also must understand the roles of floor-based and electronic exchanges, dark pool and other alternative trading systems, over-the-counter, "upstairs" and private placement markets, the clearance and settlement utilities, and the rules relating to all of these markets. Securities regulatory lawyers must understand how to conduct cross-border transactions consistent with the laws and regulations of the relevant jurisdictions. Finally, securities regulatory lawyers must stay current on legal, regulatory, and enforcement developments of the SEC, CFTC, FINRA, MSRB, PCAOB, the securities and futures exchanges, the states, and, post-Dodd-Frank, the Federal Reserve Board, FSOC, and other banking regulators.
Neal Sullivan, Partner Sidley Austin
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