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Articles 1 - 30 of 33
Full-Text Articles in Law
State Banking Department, B. Lebrecht
State Banking Department, B. Lebrecht
California Regulatory Law Reporter
No abstract provided.
Department Of Savings And Loan, M. Friedman, E. D'Angelo
Department Of Savings And Loan, M. Friedman, E. D'Angelo
California Regulatory Law Reporter
No abstract provided.
Banking And Deposit Insurance: An Unfinished Agenda For The 1990s, Sarah Jane Hughes
Banking And Deposit Insurance: An Unfinished Agenda For The 1990s, Sarah Jane Hughes
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
State Banking Department, M. Shepard
State Banking Department, M. Shepard
California Regulatory Law Reporter
No abstract provided.
Department Of Savings And Loan, S. Hilberg
Department Of Savings And Loan, S. Hilberg
California Regulatory Law Reporter
No abstract provided.
Bad Policy As A Recipe For Bad Federalism In The Regulation Of Canadian Financial Institutions: The Case Of Loan And Trust Companies, Ronald J. Daniels
Bad Policy As A Recipe For Bad Federalism In The Regulation Of Canadian Financial Institutions: The Case Of Loan And Trust Companies, Ronald J. Daniels
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
This article addresses the impact of substantive policy on federal arrangements in the regulation of Canadian loan and trust companies. It is argued that reliance on market-suppressing policies (flat-rate based deposit insurance and selective bail-outs of depositors in the event of institutional failure) has undermined the value of competitive federalism in this area, and has spawned highly contentious policy initiatives such as Ontario's Equals Approach. To redress the federalism problems in the regulation of loan and trusts, a useful starting point would be the enhancement of market forces in substantive policy. Here, it is argued that the commitment to secrecy …
Introduction To The Financial System And Securities & Exchange System Reform Act In Japan, Hiroshi Naka, Akio Nakamura, Atsushi Yamashita, Scott Siegler
Introduction To The Financial System And Securities & Exchange System Reform Act In Japan, Hiroshi Naka, Akio Nakamura, Atsushi Yamashita, Scott Siegler
Washington International Law Journal
This translation of an original Japanese language work, by Hiroshi Naka and Akio Nakamura, both of the Japanese Ministry of Finance, details the reforms of Japan's financial and securities & exchange system made under the recently enacted System Reform Act. The major reforms under the Act include: (1) altering the "Glass Steagall" rule (the separation of securities business and banking business) in Japan so that banks and securities companies can engage in each other's business through their subsidiaries; (2) extending securities regulations to some new types of structured finance; (3) amending public offering provisions and providing new articles for private …
Eliminating The Labyrinth: A Proposal To Simplify Federal Mortgage Lending Discrimination Laws, Stephen M. Dane
Eliminating The Labyrinth: A Proposal To Simplify Federal Mortgage Lending Discrimination Laws, Stephen M. Dane
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
The object of this Article is to demonstrate that the statutory and regulatory framework established by the federal government in its efforts to fight mortgage-lending discrimination is an extremely complicated labyrinth of dead ends, false passages, and elusive goals. Instead of addressing the mortgage-lending discrimination problem directly and comprehensively, Congress has taken a piecemeal and incomplete approach that generally has failed to bring the mortgage-lending industry into equal access compliance.
After pointing out the problems and deficiencies in the current statutory and regulatory scheme, this Article suggests a bold, comprehensive solution to the problem that, if implemented effectively, should ensure …
A Theory Of The Regulation Of Debtor-In-Possession Financing, George G. Triantis
A Theory Of The Regulation Of Debtor-In-Possession Financing, George G. Triantis
Vanderbilt Law Review
The profile of Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in public consciousness has surged recently. Other than the automatic stay on the enforcement of claims, the most publicized feature of bankruptcy reorganizations is debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing. Indeed, along with the bankruptcy stay, DIP financing is the motivation for many Chapter 11 filings. Under Section 364 of the Code, a firm in bankruptcy (the debtor in possession) can finance its ongoing operations and investments by issuing new debt that enjoys any one of various levels of priority, all of which rank higher than the firm's prepetition unsecured debt.' The debtor's financing …
Training Tomorrow's Banking Lawyers, John D. Hawke Jr., Melanie L. Fein
Training Tomorrow's Banking Lawyers, John D. Hawke Jr., Melanie L. Fein
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Banking Law and Regulation by Jonathan R. Macey and Geoffrey P. Miller
Implications Of The Stakeholder Model, Roberta S. Karmel
Implications Of The Stakeholder Model, Roberta S. Karmel
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Good Faith Transferees Of U.S. Treasury Securities And Other Weird Ideas: Making Federal Commercial Law, Charles W. Mooney Jr.
Good Faith Transferees Of U.S. Treasury Securities And Other Weird Ideas: Making Federal Commercial Law, Charles W. Mooney Jr.
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Efficacy Of Merit Review Of Common Stock Offerings: Do Regulators Know More Than The Market?, Marianne M. Jennings
The Efficacy Of Merit Review Of Common Stock Offerings: Do Regulators Know More Than The Market?, Marianne M. Jennings
Brigham Young University Journal of Public Law
No abstract provided.
Can 10b-5 For The Banks? The Effect Of An Antifraud Rule N The Regulation Of Banks, Michael P. Malloy
Can 10b-5 For The Banks? The Effect Of An Antifraud Rule N The Regulation Of Banks, Michael P. Malloy
McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles
In this Article, Professor Malloy explores the effects of the federal securities antifraud rule on the regulation of banks. In particular, he focuses on the changes in regulation of commercial bank trust department activities that followed the revelations in Texas Gulf Sulphur of alleged tipping between the commercial and trust departments of a major New York bank. He also argues that federal bank regulatory policy has now turned away from disclosure-oriented regulation in favor of capital supervision, and that this may be a mistaken approach to the regulation of banking.
Masters Of Paradise: Organized Crime And The Internal Revenue Service In The Bahamas, Mary Lorenz Dietz
Masters Of Paradise: Organized Crime And The Internal Revenue Service In The Bahamas, Mary Lorenz Dietz
Michigan Journal of International Law
Review of the book by Alan A. Block
Aviation Law And Regulation: Abridged Student Edition, Robert M. Hardaway, Paul Stephen Dempsey, William E. Thoms
Aviation Law And Regulation: Abridged Student Edition, Robert M. Hardaway, Paul Stephen Dempsey, William E. Thoms
Sturm College of Law: Faculty Scholarship
We sought to write a comprehensive reference book for aviation lawyers and practitioners, and airline and aircraft manufactuing executives in need of vital information regarding law and government regulation in the field of commercial and general aviation. We envision this book as an aid for the neophyte and experienced practitioner alike.
State Banking Department, M. Shepard
State Banking Department, M. Shepard
California Regulatory Law Reporter
No abstract provided.
Department Of Savings And Loan, S. Hilberg
Department Of Savings And Loan, S. Hilberg
California Regulatory Law Reporter
No abstract provided.
The Future Of Fair Housing Litigation, 26 J. Marshall L. Rev. 745 (1993), Robert G. Schwemm
The Future Of Fair Housing Litigation, 26 J. Marshall L. Rev. 745 (1993), Robert G. Schwemm
UIC Law Review
No abstract provided.
Multiple Sources Of Consumer Law And Enforcement (Or: 'Still In Search Of A Uniform Policy'), Ralph J. Rohner
Multiple Sources Of Consumer Law And Enforcement (Or: 'Still In Search Of A Uniform Policy'), Ralph J. Rohner
Scholarly Articles
In 1972 the National Commission on Consumer Finance surveyed and made recommendations for improving the legal and marketplace environments for consumer credit. Twenty years later, industry, consumer groups, government agencies, and the national and state legislatures are still groping for a coherent approach to the regulation of consumer credit. It is time for another national commission, or similar group, to make an objective and informed assessment of appropriately uniform policy for consumer financial services, and to craft a blueprint for future developments.
U.S. Bilateral Investment Treaties: The Second Wave, Kenneth J. Vandevelde
U.S. Bilateral Investment Treaties: The Second Wave, Kenneth J. Vandevelde
Michigan Journal of International Law
This Article describes and appraises the second wave of negotiations. It functions as a sequel to an earlier article that described the first ten years of the program. Although the second wave of negotiations continues, and thus any conclusions about it necessarily are tentative, the second wave already has developed a variety of characteristics that distinguish it from the first wave. The goal of this Article is to identify the ways in which the second wave appears to differ from the first and to assess the significance of the differences.
The Bank Holding Company Act: Has It Lived Its Life, Carl Felsenfeld
The Bank Holding Company Act: Has It Lived Its Life, Carl Felsenfeld
Villanova Law Review
No abstract provided.
Bank Powers To Sell Annuities, Tamar Frankel
Bank Powers To Sell Annuities, Tamar Frankel
Faculty Scholarship
The conflict over turf between the banking industry and the insurance agents has heated up again. In the 1993 case Variable Annuity Life Ins. Co. v. Clarke, 1 the Fifth Circuit held banks have no power to sell fixed annuities issued by insurance companies in cities with more than 5,000 inhabitants. On June 6, 1994, the Supreme Court granted certiorari to review the decision. 3 Both the Clinton Administration and members of Congress are considering steps toward resolving this issue. Concerned that the flight of high-quality borrowers from the banking system has rendered bank lending increasingly risky, the Comptroller of …
A Uniform And More Rational Approach To Rents As Security For The Mortgage Loan, Julia Patterson Forrester Rogers
A Uniform And More Rational Approach To Rents As Security For The Mortgage Loan, Julia Patterson Forrester Rogers
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
In this Article the author provides an introduction to the problems associated with assignments of rents by discussing the nature of rents and their treatment in the absence of an assignment. Next, the author will examine in detail the issues arising with regard to assignments of rents under current law both in and outside of the bankruptcy context. Finally, the author will discuss the proposal that rents be integrated into Article 9 of the UCC.
Bank Holding Company Act: Has It Lived Its Life, The , Carl Felsenfeld
Bank Holding Company Act: Has It Lived Its Life, The , Carl Felsenfeld
Faculty Scholarship
The Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 (BHCA) "regulates the acquisition of state and national banks by bank holding companies." The BHCA also regulates the nonbanking activities of bank holding companies and their nonbank subsidiaries. The BHCA was enacted and remains on the books for two fundamental reasons: 1) to prevent undue concentration in banking; and 2) to avoid the mixing of banking with other businesses unrelated to banking (generally called "commerce"). Both of these purposes have been or are being discredited, and it is time to ask whether the BHCA should be repealed. On several levels, banking is combined …
Rule Of Too Much Law? The New Safety/Soundness Rulemaking Responsibilities Of The Federal Banking Agencies, Lawrence G. Baxter
Rule Of Too Much Law? The New Safety/Soundness Rulemaking Responsibilities Of The Federal Banking Agencies, Lawrence G. Baxter
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Lawyer Liability In Third Party Situations: The Meaning Of The Kaye Scholar Case, Geoffrey C. Hazard Jr.
Lawyer Liability In Third Party Situations: The Meaning Of The Kaye Scholar Case, Geoffrey C. Hazard Jr.
All Faculty Scholarship
The Kaye Scholer I case has excited much attention and alarm within the legal profession. 2 It is interpreted as greatly expanding the scope of lawyer liability to third parties and heralding much greater regulatory intervention into the relationship between lawyer and client. In some respects this interpretation is accurate. The Kaye Scholer proceeding is at least a "wake up call" to the legal profession, signalling that lawyers should be much more attentive to their legal and ethical obligations in transactional and regulatory matters. However, there is also much misunderstanding about Kaye Scholer, particularly the supposition that it created novel …
Ots Vs The Bar: Must Atorneys Advise Directors That The Directors Owe A Duty To The Depository Fund?, Susan Saab Fortney
Ots Vs The Bar: Must Atorneys Advise Directors That The Directors Owe A Duty To The Depository Fund?, Susan Saab Fortney
Faculty Scholarship
This article explores the liability of attorneys representing depository institutions. Part I of this article introduces the controversy over the proper role of bank counsel following the bank and thrift crisis. Part II discusses the first Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) actions against attorneys. Part III considers the emerging theory of liability based on counsel’s duty to advise directors on their duties to depositors and the depository fund. In Part IV, a comparison of the experience of the securities bar to that of the banking bar demonstrates how the government’s enforcement activity has already changed attorney’s perceptions of their role …
A Guide To Enforcing The Community Reinvestment Act, Richard D. Marsico
A Guide To Enforcing The Community Reinvestment Act, Richard D. Marsico
Articles & Chapters
No abstract provided.
Rip To Irp - Money Laundering And Drug Trafficking Controls Score A Knockout Victory Over Bank Secrecy, Berta E. Hernández-Truyol
Rip To Irp - Money Laundering And Drug Trafficking Controls Score A Knockout Victory Over Bank Secrecy, Berta E. Hernández-Truyol
UF Law Faculty Publications
This Article reviews the evolution of bank secrecy laws and comments on the erosion of rights effected by the domestic and international efforts to curb drug trafficking and money laundering. Part II reviews the evolution of bank secrecy laws in the international sphere and views the origins of the individuals' right to financial privacy. Specifically, Part II focuses on the laws of Switzerland and England to show the bases and proliferation of secrecy protections. Part III provides the background of the status of financial privacy in the United States. The following two parts describe initiatives aimed at eliminating drug trafficking …