SEC Remains Focused on Public Disclosures Made By Life Sciences Companies
On September 5, 2025, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced a US$1.25 million settlement with biopharmaceutical company, FibroGen, Inc. (FibroGen), finding that FibroGen made false and misleading statements regarding the results of cardiovascular safety analyses of FibroGen’s anemia drug candidate, Roxadustat.

Securities Litigation Against Life Sciences Companies: 2024
Securities class actions against life sciences companies are mostly second-order problems. The first-order problem is a business or regulatory setback that, when disclosed by the company or a third party, triggers a stock price decline. Following the decline, plaintiffs’ class-action attorneys search the company’s previous public statements and seek to identify inconsistencies between past positive comments and the current negative development. In most cases, plaintiffs’ attorneys then seek to show that any arguable inconsistency amounts to fraud—that is, they will claim that the earlier statement was knowingly or recklessly false or misleading. When the challenged statement appears in a public offering document (that is, a registration statement or prospectus), plaintiffs need only show that the statement was materially false or misleading, not that it was made with scienter or caused their losses.
