204:false:false:false:false:false:false:false:false:false:!:false:-1:-1

Reliance as an element of a Rule 10b-5 claim is sometimes referred to as transaction causation.
Add Comment
Contributed in 2008 by David Gold
Law
»
Commerce, labor, particular activities & industries
»
Securities
»
Liability & enforcement
»
Fraud claims
»
SEC Rule 10b-5
»
Substance
»
Liability
»
Primary
»
Types of claims (by types of wrongs)
»
Misstatement/omission claims (10b-5(b))
»
Elements
»
Individual elements
»
Reliance
»
Relation to causation
»
= transaction causation: Reliance as an element...

If there are only two plausible inferences, and one is much more compelling than the other, then that one is also cogent and so satisfies the...
A statement that there is a risk that an event might occur is misleading if the event is almost certain to occur.
In a Rule 10b-5 action, general cautionary language does not render omission of specific adverse historical facts immaterial.