
Regulatory investigations
2021 Annual Litigation Trends Survey
United States | Publication | March 7, 2022
Norton Rose Fulbright's 2021 Annual Litigation Trends Survey indicates that there is a consistent rise in concern in the legal landscape over regulatory proceedings and investigations.
Regulatory changes and the challenge of dealing with regulations across jurisdictions and international borders were increasingly cited as a source of concern.
Many of the above concerns are not just making waves on the litigation front. Legal leaders also opine that these issues could lead to more regulatory investigations.
Over the past three years, we have seen growing concern over regulatory proceedings and investigations. Data protection, ESG, multi-jurisdictional issues and regulatory changes were all listed by respondents as factors.
Financial institutions and energy respondents were among the sectors most concerned with regulatory issues, with both groups ranking regulatory investigations as their single greatest dispute-related concern.
Download the 2021 Annual Litigation Trends Survey for more details.
This issue
Recent publications
Publication
CORSIA: A market update
The Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA) is now half way through its first phase of compliance, while the supporting regulatory frameworks constituting the building blocks for the CORSIA and Article 6 markets are incrementally being cemented in place and the market is developing fair mechanisms for managing key gap risks.
Publication
Working together to support in-house legal teams on complex legal transformation projects
We are teaming up with LawVu, a leading provider of legal workspace solutions, reflecting our shared commitment to supporting clients with tech-driven solutions to drive more efficient and effective ways of working.

Publication
Lessons from Chugga Chugg v Privinvest: Renunciation and guarantee classification
The judgment of Chugga Chugg Pty Ltd v Privinvest Holding SAL [2025] EWHC 585 (Comm) discusses important issues concerning renunciation and the classification of guarantees as instruments of primary or secondary liability.
Subscribe and stay up to date with the latest legal news, information and events . . .