Apollo Global Management, Inc.
Case Overview
| Lead Plaintiff Deadline: | Lead Plaintiff Deadline: 05/01/2026 |
| Status: | Status: Investigating |
| Company Name: | Company Name: Apollo Global Management, Inc. |
| Court: | Court: Southern District of New York |
| Case Number: | Case Number: 1:26cv01692 |
| Class Period: | Class Period: 05/10/2021 - 02/21/2026 |
| Ticker: | Ticker: APO |
| Related Attorneys: | Lead Attorneys: Lauren Molinaro |
| Related Practices: | Related Practices: Securities |
The lawsuit alleges that: (1) defendants Marc Rowan and Leon Black, among other leadership figures at Apollo Global, frequently communicated with Jeffrey Epstein in the 2010s regarding Apollo Global's business; (2) as a result, Apollo Global's assertion that it had never done business with Jeffrey Epstein was untrue; (3) because of the entanglement between Apollo Global's leaders and Jeffrey Epstein, the harm to Apollo Global's reputation was more than a mere possibility; and (4) as a result, defendants' statements about its business, operations, and prospects, were materially false and misleading and/or lacked a reasonable basis at all times.
On February 1, 2026, the Financial Times reported that “[t]op Apollo Global Management executives including chief Marc Rowan held wide-ranging discussions over the firm’s tax arrangements with Jeffrey Epstein throughout the 2010s, despite the private capital firm having previously said it ‘never did any business’ with the child sex offender.” The report was based on a review of millions of emails recently released by the U.S. Department of Justice. On this news, the price of Apollo Global shares declined by $6.34 per share, or approximately 4.8%, from $133.19 per share on February 2, 2026 to close at $126.85 on February 3, 2026.
On February 17, 2026, the Financial Times reported that two teachers’ unions whose members have over $27.5 billion in capital commitments to Apollo Global funds requested an SEC investigation into Apollo Global’s “‘lack of candour’ over its ties to Epstein.” According to the article, the unions said in their letter to the SEC “‘[w]e are troubled by Apollo’s seeming inability to be forthcoming about the extent to which Epstein was a personal, social and professional associate of the firm and its partners.’” The next day, Apollo Global's President James C. Zelter sent a letter to clients and partners claiming there was nothing new in the Epstein documents and “[n]either Marc Rowan nor anyone else at Apollo (excluding Leon Black) had either a business or personal relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.” On this news, the price of Apollo Global shares declined by $6.81 per share, or approximately 5.4%, from $125.15 per share on February 17, 2026 to close at $118.34 on February 19, 2026.
On February 21, 2026, CNN published “How Wall Street’s Apollo got tangled up again in the Epstein files.” In addition to the above matters, CNN reported that “Eleanor Bloxham, founder and CEO of The Value Alliance Company, which advises boards and executives, told CNN that she believes the unions have a ‘strong case’ pushing for an SEC investigation[]” and “described Apollo’s response this week as ‘very weak’ and questioned why Rowan’s meetings and correspondence with Epstein was not previously disclosed.” On this news, the price of Apollo Global shares declined by $5.99 per share, or approximately 5%, from $119.72 per share on February 20, 2026 to close at $113.73 on February 23, 2026.