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November 8, 2009
Reuveni on extraterritoriality, standing, and the securities laws
Erez Reuveni has posted Extraterritoriality as Standing: A Standing Theory of the Extraterritorial Application of the Securities Laws on SSRN.
Abstract:
This Article contends that the current treatment of the
extraterritorial scope of the 1934 Securities and Exchange Act as a
question of subject matter jurisdiction is wrong. Although the Act is
silent as to its extraterritorial application, for over forty years
courts have analyzed the Act’s extraterritorial scope as a question of
subject matter jurisdiction, relying on the so-called “conduct” and
“effects” tests. Because courts apply these tests in an ad hoc,
case-by-case manner, they are inherently unpredictable and
unnecessarily complicated. This state of affairs has become
particularly troublesome in recent years, as so-called “foreign-cubed”
securities fraud lawsuits - lawsuits filed by foreign plaintiffs
against foreign defendants, alleging fraud in connection with the sale
or purchase of shares in foreign markets - have proliferated in federal
courts. This Article argues that contrary to current practice, the
extraterritorial reach of Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of the 1934 Act
is really a question of statutory standing. Under the analysis
developed here, the appropriate question for courts to ask is not
whether they have jurisdiction over foreign claims, but whether
Congress intended for the statutory scheme to provide a remedy to
foreign plaintiffs. As this Article shows, only foreign investors who
purchase or sell stock in the United States have standing to invoke the
securities laws. This approach resolves the problems inherent in
jurisdictional analysis and provides a simple, easily understood
bright-line rule whose predictive value and procedural benefits ensure
an optimal enforcement regime where American interests are affected by
foreign fraud.
RJE
November 8, 2009 in Federal Courts, International/Comparative Law, Recent Scholarship, Standing | Permalink
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