
ELV截止日期:Rosen Law Firm敦促損失超過10萬美元的Elevance Health, Inc. (NYSE: ELV)股東與法律事務所聯絡以瞭解有關其權利的資訊
紐約--(BUSINESS WIRE)--(美國商業資訊)-- 全球投資人權益法律事務所Rosen Law Firm提醒投資人,一名股東代表在2024年4月18日至2024年10月16日期間購買Elevance Health, Inc. (NYSE: ELV)普通股的投資人提起了集體訴訟。Elevance將自身描述為「一家為多個市場提供健康保險計畫的醫療保健公司」。
如欲瞭解更多資訊,請遞交 表格 、向Phillip Kim律師 寄送電子郵件 ,或致電866-767-3653聯絡我們。
指控內容:Rosen Law Firm正在調查對Elevance Health, Inc. (NYSE: ELV)在其業務營運方面誤導投資人的指控。
起訴書指稱,被告做出了虛假和/或誤導性陳述及/或未揭露:在醫療補助(Medicaid)重新認定程序接近完成時,被告向投資人表示,其正密切監控與重新認定程序相關的成本趨勢,且Elevance與各州協商的保費費率足以因應繼續參加醫療補助計畫病患的風險和成本狀況。儘管被告承認醫療補助支出在上升,但仍多次向投資人保證,這已充分反映在Elevance的年度指引中。這些陳述存在重大虛假或誤導性。事實上,重新認定導致Elevance醫療補助會員的疾病嚴重程度和醫療服務利用率顯著上升,因為被移出醫療補助計畫的會員平均而言比保留資格的會員更健康。這一變化的程度並未反映在Elevance與各州的費率協商中,也未體現在其2024年的財務指引裡。訴訟稱,當市場瞭解真實詳情後,投資人蒙受了損失。
現在怎麼辦:您可能有資格參與針對Elevance Health, Inc.的集體訴訟。如果有股東希望擔任該集體訴訟的原告代表,則必須在2025年7月11日之前向法院提出申請。原告代表是指代表其他集體訴訟成員主導訴訟的當事人代表。您無需參與此案即有資格獲得追償。如果您選擇不採取任何行動,您也可以保持缺席集體訴訟成員的身分。如欲瞭解更多資訊,請點選 此處 。
所有代理均為勝訴後取酬。股東無需支付任何費用或開支。
關於Rosen Law Firm:與Rosen Law Firm不同,一些就此等事宜發表公告的法律事務所並不會實際提起證券集體訴訟。身為股東權益訴訟領域公認的領導者, Rosen Law Firm 一直致力於協助股東挽回損失、改善公司治理結構,並追究公司高階主管的違法行為責任。自成立以來,Rosen Law Firm已經為股東挽回了超過10億美元的損失。
請在LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-rosen-law-firm 、Twitter: https://twitter.com/rosen_firm 或Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rosenlawfirm/ 上關注我們,以瞭解最新情況。
律師廣告。先前案例不保證可獲致類似結果。
免責聲明:本公告之原文版本乃官方授權版本。譯文僅供方便瞭解之用,煩請參照原文,原文版本乃唯一具法律效力之版本。

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Politico
20 minutes ago
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Thune heads into a perilous vote-a-rama
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Business Insider
an hour ago
- Business Insider
The Zillow Blacklist is officially here
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Compass, the largest real estate brokerage in the US by sales volume, sued Zillow in federal court last week over the new blacklist, and industry execs have spent months trading barbs via social media, speeches, and email blasts that reached thousands of agents across the country. The back-and-forth leaves homebuyers and sellers in a weird spot. I've spent months talking to people around the industry about the hidden listings issue, and I'm left with one big conclusion: If you decide to hire an agent (which most people do), you should go into that relationship with open eyes. The rules of the game are changing. Consumers need to make sure they know exactly what they're getting from their agents and how much they'll be paying for those services. Buyers' agents should also be able to explain how they'll navigate a shifting landscape in which some listings may become harder to find. Big companies are squabbling because they need your clicks, your home listings, and, ultimately, the commission checks that flow from your deal. Whether you're a buyer or seller, your business is especially valuable right now. It can be daunting, but the upheaval may be advantageous if you play your next home transaction correctly. Every real estate company has a huge financial stake in this war over listings. Zillow's new policy is an attempt to stem the rising tide of "exclusive inventory," or homes marketed outside the multiple listing services, the formal name for the more than 500 local databases that distribute listings among fellow agents, big brokerages, and the popular search portals. Instead of being entered into the MLS, these "hidden" houses are shared among agents who belong to the same brokerage, swapped in clubby groups known as private listing networks, or posted exclusively on one brokerage's website without being distributed more widely. The leader of the push toward this walled-garden approach is Compass, which maintains its own trove of thousands of homes that you can only see by working with one of their agents. But it's far from the only company doing this — other major players, such as Howard Hanna, are increasingly leaning on hidden listings. Still others have threatened that they could do the same if the market fractures further. Candidly, I hate to come to the aid of Zillow because I don't particularly like them. Dick Selzer, owner and general manager of Selzer Realty and Associates in Ukiah, California Zillow really doesn't like this shift. The company depends on selling leads tied to the mountain of listings in its portal: When you signal your interest in a property on its website, Zillow will typically pass along your contact info to an agent who pays a fee to the site — not the agent who actually listed the house for sale. 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This may be happening out of sight, but buyers and sellers alike lose if they keep it out of mind.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Carnival Corporation & plc Announces the Launch of New Senior Unsecured Notes Offering
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