Who is the “reasonable investor”?
Abstract
Purpose
To discuss how two recent court decisions applied the materiality standard concerning information disclosed to investors and the definition of a “reasonable investor”.
Design/methodology/approach
Explains the origins and evolution of the materiality standard and the “reasonable investor” paradigm, discusses the difficulty in applying the materiality standard in the absence of a clear definition of the “reasonable investor”, and addresses potential implications of two 2016 cases, Flannery v. SEC and United States v. Litvak, on whether materiality should be applied on a subjective, rather than objective, basis and evidentiary burdens in proving materiality.
Findings
Flannery and Litvak suggest that, in assessing what information is material to a “reasonable investor”, courts may place increasing weight on the relative sophistication of investors, the types of securities and the nature of the markets in which they are investing, and types of information investors in those securities and markets typically consider to be material.
Originality/value
Informed analysis by experienced practitioners in capital markets, financial services and securities litigation.
Keywords
Citation
Tuttle, J.R., Kaplan, M.E. and Pedersen, B.R. (2016), "Who is the “reasonable investor”?", Journal of Investment Compliance, Vol. 17 No. 4, pp. 61-64. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOIC-09-2016-0044
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2016 Debevoise & Plimpton LLP.