Introduction to Securities Class Actions and Class Certification
- Securities Class Actions and Class Certification: Class certification standards in securities litigation are among the toughest in any legal field, posing significant procedural hurdles for plaintiffs aiming to pursue collective claims.
- Efficiency matters: 92% of customers report that Practical Law helps them work faster and stay informed when tackling complex legal challenges.
- Historical context:
- The late 1990s and early 2000s saw a surge of IPOs with sky-high aftermarket premiums.
- This triggered major class action lawsuits against top investment banks, culminating in a $1.4 billion “Global Settlement” to address improper IPO practices.
- Evolving landscape:
- Both plaintiffs and defendants must keep pace with changing class certification standards in securities litigation.
- Courts are now applying stricter scrutiny at the certification stage, making it a critical battleground for both sides.
- Fifth Circuit precedent:
- District courts are required to resolve all factual disputes related to every Rule 23 requirement at the class certification stage—even if those disputes overlap with the case’s merits.
- Class certification is now a decisive point where defendants can challenge presumptions like fraud-on-the-market and contest loss causation claims.
- Key elements practitioners must master for 2026:
- Navigating the heightened pleading requirements of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PSLRA).
- Understanding the ongoing circuit split over what evidence is needed at the certification stage
- Recognizing the pivotal role of loss causation in certification decisions
- Making strategic choices that can influence the outcome of a certification motion
- Bottom line:
- Staying on top of these evolving standards is essential for effectively representing clients in high-stakes securities class actions.
This overview breaks down what you need to know about class certification standards in securities litigation for 2026—arming you with insights to advocate confidently and strategically.

Legislative Foundations of Securities Class Actions:
- The evolution of securities class action laws over the past century provides essential context for today’s class certification standards in securities litigation.
- Key Statutes: The Securities Act of 1933 & Exchange Act of 1934:
- These two landmark statutes form the backbone of U.S. securities regulation:
- Securities Act of 1933:
- Focuses on original distributions (initial public offerings).
- Requires companies to register with the SEC and submit prospectuses before going public.
- Known as the “truth in securities” law, it mandates full disclosure so investors can make informed choices.
- Securities Act of 1933:
- These two landmark statutes form the backbone of U.S. securities regulation:
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- Securities Exchange Act of 1934:
- Targets secondary market transactions—regulating trading after the initial offering.
- Established the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
- Imposes ongoing disclosure obligations on public companies.
- Securities Exchange Act of 1934:
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- Different Roles, Same Goal:
- The Securities Act governs IPOs and registration statements.
- The Exchange Act oversees continuous disclosures and secondary market activity.
- Anti-Fraud Protections:
- Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and SEC Rule 10b-5 are the primary anti-fraud provisions, prohibiting any deceptive schemes or practices.
- Most modern securities class actions rely on these rules as their legal foundation.
- Private Rights of Action: How Investors Got a Voice:
- Originally, only government agencies could enforce these acts.
- Courts have allowed private lawsuits under Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 since the mid-1940s.
- For over fifty years, the Supreme Court has recognized private securities litigation as a “necessary supplement” to public enforcement—especially since SEC resources are limited.
- The Power Shift: Rule 23’s Opt-Out Revolution (1966):
- The revision of Rule 23 enabled opt-out class actions, fundamentally changing the landscape for securities litigation.
- This change was largely driven by the need to address complex securities cases—allowing investors to band together and pursue claims more effectively.
This summary highlights how legislative history shapes current class certification standards in securities litigation—giving you a strong foundation for understanding today’s high-stakes legal environment.

Impact of the PSLRA and SLUSA on Class Certification
Congress created the PSLRA in 1995 to stop “abusive practices committed in private securities litigation” and discourage “professional plaintiffs”. The PSLRA changed class certification through several key rules:
- Stricter pleading standards that make plaintiffs identify each allegedly fraudulent statement clearly
- Automatic pause of discovery during a motion to dismiss
- New process to select lead plaintiffs favoring institutional investors with the biggest financial stake
- Safe harbor for forward-looking statements with meaningful cautionary language
- Later, Congress passed the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act (SLUSA) in 1998. This prevented plaintiffs from avoiding PSLRA requirements by filing in state courts. SLUSA blocks “certain state law class actions that allege a misrepresentation or an omission of a material fact in connection with the purchase or sale of a covered security“.
- These reforms wanted to stop frivolous lawsuits but created new problems for legitimate claims. Cases like Under Armor and Hertz show how the PSLRA’s strict pleading standards can hurt investors’ chances to hold wrongdoers accountable. This often “leaves justice to the luck of timing rather than the merits of the claim”.
- The Supreme Court’s 2018 decision in Cyan v. Beaver County confirmed that SLUSA doesn’t take away state courts’ power over class actions under the Securities Act. This ruling brought back some pre-SLUSA jurisdictional rules, giving plaintiffs the choice between state and federal courts for Securities Act claims.
PRE- AND POST-PSLRA STANDARDS FOR SECURITIES FRAUD LITIGATION
|
Feature |
Pre-PSLRA Standard |
Post-PSLRA Standard |
| Motion to dismiss | Based on “notice pleading” (Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a)), making it easier for plaintiffs to survive motions to dismiss. This often led to settlements to avoid costly litigation. | Requires satisfying PSLRA’s heightened pleading standards and the “plausibility” standard from Twombly and Iqbal. Failure to plead with particularity on any element can result in dismissal. |
| Pleading | “Notice pleading” was generally sufficient, though fraud claims under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b) required particularity for the circumstances of fraud, but intent could be alleged generally. | Each misleading statement must be stated with particularity, explaining why it was misleading. Facts supporting beliefs in claims based on “information and belief” must also be stated with particularity. |
| Scienter | Pleaded broadly; the “motive and opportunity” test was often sufficient to infer intent. | Requires alleging facts creating a “strong inference” of fraudulent intent, which must be at least as compelling as any opposing inference of non-fraudulent intent, as clarified in Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd.. |
| Loss causation | Not a significant pleading hurdle, often assumed if a plaintiff bought at an inflated price. | Requires pleading facts showing the fraud caused the economic loss, often by linking a corrective disclosure to a stock price drop. Dura Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Broudo affirmed this. |
| Discovery | Could proceed while a motion to dismiss was pending. | Automatically stayed during a motion to dismiss. |
| Safe harbor for forward-looking statements | No statutory protection. | Protects certain forward-looking statements if accompanied by “meaningful cautionary statements”. |
| Lead plaintiff selection | Often the first investor to file. | Court selects based on a “rebuttable presumption” that the investor with the largest financial interest is the most adequate. |
| Liability standard | For non-knowing violations, liability was joint and several. | For non-knowing violations, liability is proportionate; joint and several liability applies only if a jury finds knowing violation. |
| Mandatory sanctions | Available under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11, but judges were often reluctant to impose them. | Requires judges to review for abusive conduct |
Certification Criteria in Securities Litigation: Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 sets up the framework that guides class certification standards in securities litigation. Plaintiffs and defendants need to know these criteria when they handle complex securities class actions.
Numerosity, Commonality, Typicality, and Adequacy Explained
Rule 23(a) requires four key conditions before any class action can get certified:
- Numerosity: The class should be big enough that joining all members isn’t practical. Courts haven’t set a fixed number, but 40 members usually meets this requirement. Sometimes courts review other factors like how spread out members are and what type of action it is.
- Commonality: The Supreme Court’s ruling in Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes shows that just listing common questions is not enough. The key is whether “the classwide proceeding can give common answers that help resolve the litigation“. At least one issue must affect all class members the same way.
- Typicality: Claims from class representatives should line up with other class members’ claims. Courts get into whether these claims come from the same event or pattern and use similar legal theories. Claims don’t need to be exactly alike, but big factual differences might prevent typicality.
- Adequacy: Representatives must protect class interests fairly. This means checking if representatives share the same interests and motivations as other class members. Courts also look for any major conflicts between representatives and class members.

Rule 23(b)(3) Predominance and Superiority Requirements
Securities class actions usually move forward under Rule 23(b)(3) after meeting Rule 23(a) prerequisites. This rule adds two more requirements:
- Predominance: Common questions must matter more than individual ones. Courts take a hard look at this “demanding” requirement. They want a full picture of whether plaintiffs can prove class-wide impact using common evidence.
- Superiority: Class action needs to be the best way to handle the case. Courts think over factors like members’ interest in running their own cases, current litigation status, benefits of one forum, and possible management issues.
The Supreme Court makes it clear that Rule 23 isn’t just about meeting basic standards. Anyone seeking certification must prove they meet all requirements with solid evidence, not just claims.
CIRCUIT SPLIT ON PLEADING A STRONG INFERENCE OF SCIENTER
|
Circuit |
Summary of Pleading Standard | Key Cases | Notes and Circuit Splits |
| First Circuit | Requires strong inference of scienter under PSLRA standards. Accepts allegations of motive and opportunity combined with strong circumstantial evidence. | Greenberg v. Crossroads Systems(2020); In re Biogen Securities Litigation(2019) |
Aligns with majority circuits requiring “strong inference” but more lenient on motive and opportunity allegations than some circuits. |
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Second Circuit |
Applies “strong inference”standard with emphasis on holistic analysis. Requires inference of scienter to be at least as compelling as any opposing inference. | Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights(2007); ATSI Communications v. Shaar Fund(2021) | Leading circuit on scienter interpretation post-Tellabs. Emphasizes comparative plausibility of inferences. |
| Third Circuit | Follows Tellabs standard requiring strong inference that is cogent and compelling. Accepts core operations doctrine in limited circumstances. | In re Hertz Global Holdings Securities Litigation(2020); City of Edinburgh Council v. Pfizer(2014) |
Circuit spliton core operations doctrine – more restrictive than some circuits but accepts it in narrow circumstances. |
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Fourth Circuit |
Requires “strong inference”with particular emphasis on contemporaneous evidence. Skeptical of pure motive and opportunity allegations. | Teachers’ Retirement System v. Hunter(2019); Cozzarelli v. Inspire Pharmaceuticals(2008) | More demanding standard for motive and opportunityallegations compared to First and Ninth Circuits. |
| Fifth rcuit | Applies strict “strong inference”standard. Requires particularized factssuggesting deliberate recklessness or actual knowledge. | ABC Arbitrage Plaintiffs Group v. Tchuruk(2002); Rosenzweig v. Azurix Corp.(2003) |
Most restrictive circuiton scienter pleading. Rarely accepts motive and opportunity alone. |
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Sixth Circuit |
Follows Tellabswith moderate application. Accepts core operations doctrineand strong circumstantial evidence. | In re Omnicare Securities Litigation(2014); Helwig v. Vencor(2001) | Middle groundapproach – less restrictive than Fifth Circuit but more demanding than Ninth Circuit. |
| Seventh Circuit | Home of Tellabs decision. Requires holistic analysis where inference of scienter must be at least as compellingas competing inferences. | Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights(2007); Higginbotham v. Baxter International(2007) |
Authoritative circuitpost-Tellabs. Emphasizes comparative plausibilitystandard. |
|
Eighth Circuit |
Applies “strong inference”standard with acceptance of core operations doctrine. Moderate approach to motive and opportunity. | In re K-tel International Securities Litigation(2002); In re Navarre Corp. Securities Litigation(2002) | Generally follows mainstream approach without significant departures from other circuits. |
| Ninth Circuit | Most lenient circuit on scienter pleading. Readily accepts motive and opportunityallegations and core operations doctrine. | In re Oracle Corp. Securities Litigation(2010); Zucco Partners v. Digimarc Corp.(2009) |
Major circuit split- significantly more plaintiff-friendly than Fifth, Second, and Fourth Circuits. |
|
Tenth Circuit |
Requires “strong inference”with emphasis on deliberate recklessness. Moderate acceptance of circumstantial evidence. | City of Philadelphia v. Fleming Cos.(2001); Adams v. Kinder-Morgan(2003) | Follows mainstream approach similar to Sixth and Eighth Circuits. |
| Eleventh Circuit | Applies strict “strong inference”standard. Requires particularized allegationsof actual knowledge or deliberate recklessness. | Bryant v. Avado Brands(1999); In re Stac Electronics Securities Litigation(1999) |
Restrictive approachsimilar to Fifth Circuit. Skeptical of pure motive and opportunity theories. |
| D.C. Circuit | Follows Tellabsstandard with rigorous analysis. Emphasizes need for contemporaneous evidenceof scienter. | Jaffee v. Crane Co.(2016); Longman v. Food Lion(1999) | Sophisticated analysisreflecting complex securities cases. Generally restrictive but fact-specific. |
| Federal Circuit | Limited securities jurisdiction. When applicable, follows Tellabsstandard with emphasis on technical complexityconsiderations. | In re Seagate Technology Securities Litigation(2008) | Rarely handles securities cases. Defers to regional circuits on most scienter issues. |
The Supreme Court’s “necessary supplement” standard
- Early recognition: The Court first established the “necessary supplement” standard in the 1964 case J.I. Case v. Borak. The decision stated that federal courts have a duty to provide remedies for securities fraud, as private litigation plays a vital role in enforcing securities laws in securities litigation.
- Implied private right of action: Borak recognized an implied private right of action, which allows investors to sue for fraud under the federal securities laws, even when the law does not explicitly grant that right. This established the legal foundation for modern securities fraud class actions.
Reasons private actions supplement public enforcement
- Limited SEC resources: The sheer volume of transactions and market participants means the SEC has limited resources and must focus on the most egregious or highest-impact cases. In its fiscal year (FY) 2026 budget request, the SEC detailed plans for a 2% budget decrease and a 17% workforce reduction, further stretching its capacity for enforcement.
- Deterrence: The threat of a private securities litigation, which can lead to large monetary damages, provides a significant deterrent against misconduct. Securities litigation incentivizes companies to comply with securities laws and maintain high standards of corporate governance.
- Investor compensation: While the SEC can recover funds for harmed investors, private securities litigation is often the primary vehicle for investors to seek direct monetary compensation for their losses. In some instances, private litigation has secured much larger monetary recoveries for investors than concurrent SEC actions.
- Broader coverage: Private securities litigation actions expand the scope of market oversight. Cases that might not be prioritized by the SEC due to resource constraints or strategic considerations can still be addressed through private lawsuits.
Changes and challenges for private securities litigation
- Heightened pleading standards: The PSLRA was intended to curb frivolous lawsuits by increasing pleading requirements and establishing a “strong inference of scienter” (the intent to deceive). This has made it more difficult for plaintiffs to bring certain claims, potentially screening out some cases with merit.
- Strict procedural hurdles: Cases likeUnder Armor and Hertz demonstrate how rigid pleading standards and procedural requirements can derail a private lawsuit, potentially allowing corporate wrongdoing to go unpunished.
- Debate over effectiveness: There is an ongoing debate among legal scholars about the overall effectiveness of the PSLRA. Some argue that it has successfully reduced frivolous litigation, while others contend it has had a negligible impact on the overall quality or number of securities class action lawsuits.

Rule 23(f) Interlocutory Appeals in Securities Litigation
Rule 23(f) lets parties appeal decisions about class certification right away, which can change everything in securities litigation cases. Recent patterns show:
- Appeals courts turn down about 75% of Rule 23(f) petitions, often without explaining why.
- The D.C. Circuit made waves in 2023 by accepting a petition in National ATM Council, Inc. v. Visa Inc., pointing out the lower court’s “notably terse” analysis that ignored recent Supreme Court cases.
- Courts focus on four main things: whether the appeal might succeed, if costs could block later review, if there are new legal questions, and what’s happening in the district court.
- The Sixth Circuit wants more than just general statements about certification being crucial. Defendants should show real numbers about costs and risks.
- Throughout 2024, courts have kept a close eye on how district courts explain their certification decisions, especially regarding jurisdiction in collective actions.
These patterns show courts are getting stricter about class certification standards in securities litigation. They want detailed evidence and analysis at every step.
The Gatekeeper in Class Certification in Securities Litigation: Loss Causation
1. Connecting fraud to financial loss in securities class action lawsuits
- The Dura standard: Plaintiffs in securities class action lawsuits must demonstrate a clear causal connection between a defendant’s alleged fraud and their economic losses. The Supreme Court’s decision in Dura Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Broudo fundamentally requires this, rejecting the idea that paying an inflated price alone constitutes a loss.
- Beyond transaction causation: It is crucial to distinguish between transaction causation (the plaintiff’s reliance on the misrepresentation to invest) and loss causation (the plaintiff’s actual economic loss). While transaction causation explains why the plaintiff invested, loss causation explains why they lost money.
2. Eliminating confounding factors in securities class action lawsuits
- Isolating the fraud: A central challenge is isolating the impact of the defendant’s alleged fraudulent conduct from other market and economic variables. Plaintiffs in securities class action lawsuits must plausibly allege that the fraud, rather than confounding factors, caused the loss.
- Examples of confounding factors:
- Overall market downturns (e.g., a recession).
- Industry-wide trends.
- Negative company-specific news unrelated to the alleged fraud.
- Expert analysis: To meet this burden, plaintiffs often rely on expert economic analysis, such as an event study, to statistically demonstrate that the stock price drop was caused by the corrective disclosure and not other variables.
3. The corrective disclosure in securities class action lawsuits
- Telling the “truth” to the market: Loss causation is established when the “truth” behind the misrepresentation is revealed to the market, causing the stock price to drop. This event, known as a corrective disclosure, can take many forms:
- A corporate press release or SEC filing.
- A negative news report.
- The announcement of a government investigation.
- A short-seller report (though these are subject to heightened judicial scrutiny).
- Market reaction: The complaint in securities class action lawsuits must allege a corresponding negative market reaction following the corrective disclosure, plausibly tying the revelation of the fraud to the decline in value.
4. Methodical establishment of causation in securities class action lawsuits
- Requires deep understanding: Meticulously establishing that value drops resulted directly from fraudulent activity, rather than extraneous variables, requires a solid understanding of both legal principles and financial mechanisms.
- Evidentiary focus: The evidence presented must focus on the causal link between the alleged misrepresentation and the stock price decline. This includes market data, financial statements, and a clear chronological narrative of events.
- Judicial scrutiny: The strength of the plaintiff’s evidence in proving loss causation in securities class action lawsuits is often a key factor in determining whether a case proceeds to trial or is dismissed.
5. Importance for securities litigation
- Foundation of the claim: Loss causation is a central pillar of a successful legal strategy. Without adequately pleading it, securities fraud claims typically fail, highlighting its importance beyond a mere procedural formality.
- High stakes for investors: For investors, failure to properly prove loss causation in securities class action lawsuits extinguishes the possibility of recovering financial losses resulting from the alleged fraud, underscoring the high stakes involved in securities litigation.
Pleading Loss Causation in Securities Class Action Lawsuit
- Crucial for investors: Failure to effectively plead loss causation according to the standard set by Dura Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Broudo can result in early case dismissal.
- Court requirements: Plaintiffs must plead a proximate cause between the defendant’s alleged misrepresentation and the plaintiff’s economic loss, not merely that they paid an inflated price.
- Filtering function: This rigorous requirement ensures that only claims with a substantive basis, where loss is plausibly attributable to the fraud, proceed, filtering out speculative allegations in securities class action lawsuits based on confounding market factors.
- Strategic pillar: Loss causation is a substantive, not merely procedural, hurdle. Satisfying this requirement is central to a successful legal strategy, as failure to do so can be fatal to a claim in securities class action lawsuits.
- High stakes: For investors, failure to properly plead loss causation extinguishes the possibility of recovering financial losses resulting from the alleged fraud.
- Effective pleading: A well-pled complaint provides the crucial link needed to survive a motion to dismiss, significantly improving a plaintiff’s chances of recovery.
- Market complexity: The intricate nature of financial markets necessitates detailed analysis and presentation of evidence. This often requires plaintiffs to use economic analysis to isolate the fraud’s impact.
- Evolved standard: The legal standard has evolved from a more lenient pre-Dura approach to the current proximate cause requirement, shaped by key court rulings and judicial interpretations.
- Informed investors: Staying current on legal developments, including how different circuits view evidence like short-seller reports, is crucial for aligning arguments with judicial expectations.
- Strategic foresight: A successful litigation strategy involves anticipating and actively rebutting defenses that attempt to attribute the price decline to external market factors rather than the alleged fraud.

Loss Causation: Key Elements
1. Misrepresentation and materiality
- Refinement of terms: The misrepresentation is a false statement or material omission made by the defendant. The misrepresentation is the “what” of the alleged fraud, while materiality is the “significance” of that misrepresentation.
- The “reasonable investor” standard: A misrepresentation is considered material if there is a substantial likelihood that a reasonable investor would have considered it important in making an investment decision.
- Foundation of the claim: These elements are the starting point. You cannot prove loss causation unless you first establish that a material misrepresentation was made and entered the market.
2. Proving direct causation (The Dura standard)
- “Proximate cause” required: As established by the Supreme Court in Dura Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Broudo, it is not enough for a plaintiff to allege they paid an inflated price for a security. They must plead and prove that the defendant’s alleged misrepresentation was the proximate cause of their economic loss.
- Connecting fraud to loss: This requires a causal link between the revelation of the fraud and the subsequent decline in the security’s value. The plaintiff must show that the loss was a foreseeable result of the misrepresentation, meaning the loss would not have occurred absent the fraud.
3. Chronological narrative
- Telling the story: A successful complaint in securities class action lawsuits must present a clear, compelling timeline. This narrative must chronologically link the misleading statement, the subsequent entry of the “relevant truth” into the market, and the resulting stock price decline.
- Timeline components: This narrative typically includes:
- The date and content of the defendant’s misrepresentation.
- The date and content of the corrective disclosure or event.
- The stock price before and after the corrective event.
4. The corrective disclosure and market analysis in securities class action lawsuits
- The “corrective” event: The loss is realized when the truth behind the misrepresentation is revealed to the market. This “corrective disclosure” can take various forms:
- A company press release announcing a restatement of earnings.
- A government investigation.
- An analyst report that reveals the fraud.
- The materialization of a concealed risk.
- Isolating the fraud’s impact: Plaintiffs must analyze market responses to show that the price drop was caused by the corrective disclosure, and not by “confounding factors” like:
- Overall market downturns.
- Industry-wide trends.
- Macroeconomic shifts.
- Other company-specific news unrelated to the fraud.
5. Timing and proximity
- The closer, the stronger: While not an absolute requirement, a close temporal proximity between the corrective disclosure and the stock price drop can significantly strengthen a loss causation argument.
- Addressing delays: If there is a substantial delay, the plaintiff must credibly explain how the causal link is still present despite the passage of time. This can become more difficult if other market events occurred during the interim.
6. Evidence and economic analysis in securities class action lawsuits
- Types of evidence: Evidence to support loss causation can include:
- Market data showing the stock price movement.
- Public announcements and filings.
- Expert economic analysis (such as an “event study”) to isolate the impact of the corrective disclosure.
- Short-seller reports (though these can be subject to greater judicial scrutiny).
- Showing the negative reaction: The evidence must persuasively demonstrate that the market’s negative reaction was specifically to the disclosure of the fraudulent conduct or concealed information, not to other factors. The goal is to show the value lost was attributable to the falsehood, and not, for example, to a general market correction.
Pleading Loss Causation: Common Challenges
1. Challenges with corrective disclosures in securities class actions
- The Dura requirement: Following the Dura decision, plaintiffs can’t simply allege that the purchase price was inflated due to fraud. They must demonstrate that the fraud actually caused their economic loss. The most common way to do this is to identify a “corrective disclosure”—a public event that reveals the truth about the fraud and causes the stock price to drop.
- Defining a corrective disclosure: What constitutes a “corrective disclosure” is often a point of contention. It may not always be a formal corporate filing. It could be a news report, an analyst downgrade, a government investigation, or a competitor’s disclosure. However, defendants often argue that the disclosure is not “corrective” because it does not directly relate to the original misrepresentation.
- Series of disclosures (slow leak): Sometimes, the truth is not revealed in a single event but “leaks” into the market over a period. This “slow leak” theory can be more difficult to prove, as it requires plaintiffs to demonstrate that the stock price suffered a series of declines as negative information related to the fraud gradually came to light.
2. Short-seller reports
- Contested credibility: Plaintiffs in securities class actions often use reports by short-selling firms to show a corrective disclosure. However, defendants frequently challenge the credibility of these reports, arguing they are driven by the author’s financial motives and are not reliable sources of truth.
- Legal scrutiny: Some circuits, like the Fourth and Ninth, have placed limits on the use of short-seller reports for pleading loss causation, especially when the reports rely on anonymous sources, contain disclaimers, or are published by a financially motivated party.
3. Confounding factors and “price maintenance”
- Attributing the drop: A stock price drop after a corrective disclosure is not always enough. Plaintiffs must plausibly allege that the drop was caused by the revelation of the fraud, not by other “confounding factors”. These factors include broader market downturns, industry trends, or other company-specific news.
- Economic analysis: This often requires sophisticated financial analysis, known as an “event study,” to isolate the portion of the stock drop attributable to the fraud. Such analyses are typically done by expert economists who can testify on the statistical significance of the price changes.
- Price maintenance theory: This theory, though difficult to prove, argues that a misrepresentation inflated a stock’s price by “maintaining” it at an artificial level, preventing an inevitable decline. This theory is particularly relevant during periods when the company’s performance is weak but the stock price remains steady.
4. The “truth-on-the-market” defense
- Countering claims: This defense can be used by defendants to argue that the allegedly concealed information was already available to investors through other public sources.
- Negating inflation: By establishing that the truth was already out, the defense negates the claim that the market price was artificially inflated by the defendant’s misrepresentations. This makes it difficult for plaintiffs to show that a later disclosure was truly “corrective” and had an impact on the stock price.
5. Nuances at the class certification stage
- Individualized inquiry: The complex nature of loss causation in securities class actions and the need for individualized proof can pose a challenge at the class certification stage. Defendants sometimes argue that loss causation is not a common question of fact among all class members, and therefore the class should not be certified.
- Proof at trial: The standard of proof for loss causation at trial is often distinct from the pleading stage. Plaintiffs must provide sufficient evidence to convince a judge or jury that the fraud was the actual cause of the loss.
Empirical Evidence Requirements for Market Impact
The Supreme Court cleared things up in Halliburton Co. v. Erica P. John Fund (Halliburton II). Defendants can rebut the presumption of reliance by showing “that the alleged misrepresentation did not actually affect the stock price”. This created several guidelines for using empirical evidence:
- Event studies are now the quickest way to prove or disprove price impact in securities class action lawsuits. These studies look at stock price changes when misrepresentations happen (“front-end”) and when truth comes out (“back-end”)
- Courts must look at “direct evidence refuting price impact” during certification, but plaintiffs don’t have to prove loss causation in securities class action lawsuits
- The Supreme Court made a clear difference between reliance (transaction causation) and loss causation, noting that “loss causation has no logical connection to the facts necessary to establish the efficient market predicate“
- The Court emphasized that loss causation is “a matter different from whether an investor relied on a misrepresentation“. Plaintiffs don’t have to prove loss causation to use the Basic presumption. Defendants can still present evidence that breaks the connection between alleged misrepresentations and price changes.
- Market experts must carefully separate price changes caused by fraud from those caused by market or industry factors. Recent market swings have made this work harder. Experts now just need detailed economic analysis to find meaningful price changes tied to specific disclosures.
Discovery Stay and Heightened Pleading Standards in Securities Litigation
Procedural challenges in securities class action lawsuits start well before class certification. The PSLRA created tough barriers during the pleading stage that significantly affect case outcomes.
FRCP 9(b) and PSLRA’s Scienter Requirements in Securities Litigation
Securities litigation claims faced strict pleading requirements under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b) even before PSLRA came into effect. The rule requires specific details for fraud allegations. PSLRA adds more requirements:
- Plaintiffs need to point out each misleading statement
- Cases must explain why statements misled people
- Claims needing scienter require facts that show a “strong inference” of the defendant’s state of mind
Courts interpret these requirements broadly. They apply FRCP 9(b) standards to securities class actions claims that “sound in fraud” even when fraudulent intent is not needed.
Information and Belief Allegations Post-Tellabs in Securities Litigation
The Supreme Court’s Tellabs decision changed how courts review scienter allegations:
- A “strong inference” needs to be “cogent and at least as compelling as any opposing inference of nonfraudulent intent“
- Courts must take a comprehensive look at the complaint rather than examining individual claims
Claims made on “information and belief” must state “with particularity all facts that formed that belief“. This stops plaintiffs from making claims based on unnamed sources they can only verify after discovery.
Automatic Stay of Discovery and Preservation Duties
The PSLRA’s automatic discovery stay creates another major hurdle:
- Discovery proceedings stop during motions to dismiss
- This applies to “any private action” under securities laws, including state court securities class actions
- New York’s First Department Appellate Division ruled in 2023 that the stay applies to state court actions
This automatic stay blocks plaintiffs from using discovery to build their cases or fix pleading issues. In spite of that, parties must preserve relevant documents during the stay as if discovery requests were active.
Strict pleading standards combined with discovery stay create huge obstacles for plaintiffs in securities litigation before they reach class certification standards review.
Strategic Considerations for Plaintiffs and Defendants
- As we move into 2026, securities litigation strategies are evolving—bringing higher stakes and greater financial exposure for companies.
- Lead Plaintiff Selection & Group Aggregation:
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- The PSLRA sets strict criteria, emphasizing the financial interest of lead plaintiffs in the outcome.
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- Prospective lead plaintiffs must file their applications within 60 days of a class action’s commencement.
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- The primary factor for selection remains the scale of financial losses suffered during the class period
- Leveraging Confidential Witnesses & Analyst Reports:
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- Plaintiffs increasingly rely on technical reviews and detailed process analyses to bolster their claims.
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- All statements from confidential witnesses must be thoroughly vetted by legal teams prior to filing complaints.
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- Witness anonymity is permitted, but courts require “sufficient particularity” in descriptions to establish credibility.
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- Recent rulings indicate growing judicial skepticism toward unsupported confidential witness claims.

- Settlement Dynamics & Class Certification Challenges:
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- Defendants have limited success challenging class certification—only about 10% of cases reach a ruling on this issue.
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- Directors & Officers (D&O) insurance policies now often include event study coverage, offering a strategic defense advantage.
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- Settlement agreements must be carefully structured to protect plaintiffs’ financial interests throughout litigation.
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- If class certification is denied, plaintiffs cannot simply dismiss individual claims while preserving appeal rights—raising the stakes for both sides.
This overview distills the latest strategic trends for both plaintiffs and defendants in securities litigation as we approach 2025—helping you anticipate risks and opportunities in this dynamic legal arena.
Conclusion: Navigating Class Certification in Securities Litigation
- As we approach 2026, class certification standards continue to pose significant challenges for both plaintiffs and defendants in securities litigation.
- Federal Rule 23 sets the foundation, requiring numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy.
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- Loss causation remains a critical hurdle—especially after landmark decisions like Oscar v. Allegiance and Halliburton II.
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- Circuit courts are divided on how deeply they scrutinize the merits at the certification stage, with the Fifth Circuit applying some of the strictest standards.
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- The PSLRA’s heightened pleading requirements create tough obstacles before cases can even reach class certification—most notably when it comes to proving scienter (intent to deceive).
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- Automatic discovery stays prevent routine information gathering until certain thresholds are met, forcing lawyers to rethink their early case strategies.
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- Strategic considerations around lead plaintiff selection, use of confidential witnesses, and timing of settlements become even more important as certification approaches.
- Increasing Complexity Ahead:
- Securities class actions will only get more intricate as courts continue to refine certification standards.
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- The ongoing tension between rigorous gatekeeping and preserving access to collective legal remedies will shape the landscape of these cases.
- Practical Guidance:
- Mastery of evolving certification rules is essential for success in securities class actions.
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- Courts now examine certification motions with increased scrutiny—demanding thorough preparation and strategic foresight from legal teams aiming for favorable outcomes.
Contact Timothy L. Miles Today for a Free Case Evaluation about Security Class Action Lawsuits