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LegalBlogsEnforcement: Should You Consider Litigating?
Enforcement: Should You Consider Litigating?
Private EquityLegal

Enforcement: Should You Consider Litigating?

•February 20, 2026
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The CorporateCounsel.net Blog
The CorporateCounsel.net Blog•Feb 20, 2026

Why It Matters

Reduced penalties and legal ambiguity reshape corporate risk management, making litigation a viable lever to curb excessive SEC sanctions.

Key Takeaways

  • •SEC penalties dropped ~30% after 2025 administration change
  • •Disgorgement future hinges on Supreme Court ruling this year
  • •Litigation can pressure SEC to reduce excessive sanctions
  • •Companies with foreign ties, prior issues, or AI products scrutinized
  • •Cooperation and remediation now earn more regulator credit

Pulse Analysis

The SEC’s enforcement posture has shifted dramatically since the 2025 administration change. Corporate penalties, which once hovered in the high‑six‑figure range, have slumped by roughly 30 percent, and the agency appears more willing to reward early cooperation and remediation. This softer stance, however, coexists with lingering uncertainty over the future of disgorgement, as the Supreme Court is set to decide whether the regulator must prove investor pecuniary harm before imposing the remedy. Companies therefore face a mixed environment of reduced monetary pressure but ambiguous legal standards. This environment compels boards to revisit enforcement strategies.

Litigation, once a last‑resort tactic, is now re‑emerging as a viable defense. A credible threat of court action can pressure the SEC to temper excessive fines or non‑monetary sanctions, especially when the agency’s penalty guidelines remain fluid. Settling still offers certainty, but firms that can demonstrate strong remediation may extract more favorable terms by leveraging the prospect of protracted litigation. Counsel must weigh the cost of courtroom battles against potential savings from reduced penalties and the reputational benefit of fighting perceived overreach.

The blog highlights three categories likely to attract SEC scrutiny: companies with foreign ownership or operations, firms with prior enforcement histories, and businesses launching new products—particularly those involving artificial intelligence. These sectors face heightened monitoring because cross‑border transactions can obscure compliance, repeat offenders signal systemic risk, and novel technologies raise novel disclosure challenges. Executives should therefore integrate enforcement risk assessments into product development cycles, strengthen internal controls, and consider pre‑emptive engagement with the SEC to mitigate the chance of costly litigation.

Enforcement: Should You Consider Litigating?

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