Pension Plan Plaintiffs Cost Corporate Defendants With Opt-Outs

A recent trend in class action litigation circles is the pension plan opt-out. Choosing not to settle with the rest of the "class," several large institutional investors are getting recompense that reflects multiples of what they could otherwise receive.

Pension Governance contributing editor, attorney Kevin Lacroix talks about this significant shift in class action outcomes, citing a sea change in the cost of litigation. Click here for more information about Kevin's interesting article and here to read more about our first class team of contributing editors.

PG Editor's Note: We have just posted an interesting and complementary item to www.pensiongovernance.com. In "Predicting Corporate Governance Risk: Evidence from the Directors' & Officers' Liability Insurance Market," authors Tom Baker and Sean J. Griffith examine how liability insurance underwriters assess corporate governance behavior - and related expectations of risk - when pricing coverage. The authors also examine whether corporations are deterred by the cost of liability insurance, especially since "virtually all corporations purchase D&O insurance to cover the risk of shareholder litigation, and because virtually all shareholder litigation settles within the D&O insurance limits, the D&O insurance premium represents the insurer’s best guess of the insured’s expected liability costs." The authors conclude that governance factors such as culture and character are taken into account by insurance underwriters. Click here for more information.

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