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- Corporate Law; Accountability; Corporate Governance; Governance Procedure; Bankruptcy; Insolvency; Incumbent Management; Management; Good Governance; Deference; Shareholders; CEO; Market Control; Agency Cost; (1)
- Corporate Law; Corporate Control; Insolvency; Zone of Insolvency;Takeover; Bankruptcy; Bankruptcy Law; Liquidation; Recapitalization; Governance Power; (1)
- Corporate Law; Corporate Control; Insolvency; Zone of Insolvency;Takeover; Bankruptcy; Bankruptcy Law; Liquidation; Recapitalization; Governance Power; Asset Sale; Section 363(b); RSA; RSAs; Chapter 11; Debtor (1)
- Doping; Anti-Doping; Olympics; Olympic Committee; Russia; Performance Enhancing Drugs; PEDs; Sports; Athletics; Steroids; NGOs; World Anti-Doping Agency; WADA; International Association of Athletics Federation; IIAF; International Olympic Committee: IOC; Olympic Movement; National Olympic Committees; NOCs; Russian Olympic Committee; ROC; International Federations; IF; Drugs; World Anti-Doping Code; Punishment; State-Sponsored Doping; Olympic Charter; Independent Person Report; National Anti-Doping Organizations; NADO; World Anti-Doping Code (1)
- Equifax Data Breach; Sensitive Information; Information; Personal Information; PII; Personally Identifiable Information; Data; Private Data; Data Breaches; Data Breach; Consumer Class Actions; Class Actionl Arbitration; Victim Recovery Fund; Remedy; Consumer Data Breach (1)
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- Federal Securities Law; Securities; Securities Law; Information; Informational Asymmetries; Financial Distress; Credit Default Swaps; CDS; Decoupling; Compliance; Final Period; Class Action Certification; Rule 10b-5; Management's Discussion and Analysis; Disclosure Requirements; Extra-company; Decoupling Activities; Information Asymmetry; Third-party Activities; Public Information; Empty Creditors; Bankrupt; Bankruptcy Law; Default; Net Short; Norske Skog; Hovnanian; Windstream Services; GSO Capital Partners (1)
- Fiduciary Duty; Bankruptcy; Bankruptch Trustee's Administration; Trustee; Bankruptcy Code; Bankruptcy Claims Trading; Bankruptcy M&A; Fiduciary Duties; Commodore; Debtor-in-possession; Trustee Duties (1)
- Investor-State Dispute Settlement; ISDS; International Investment; Corporations; Investment; Foreign Investment; Investment Disputes of the World Bank; ICSID; United Nations Commission on International Trade Law; UNCITRAL; Arbitration; International Arbitration; Investment Treaties; Bilateral Investment Treaties; BITs; Expropriation; Minimum Standards; National Treatment; Trans-Pacific Partnership; TTP; Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership; TTIP; Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards; Trade Agreements; Phillips Morris v. Uruguay; European Union; Investor Court System; 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards; ICSID Convention; Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement; CETA (1)
- Secured Credit; Subsidiaries; Inefficiency; Fraud; Asset Partitioning; Non-transparency; Corporate Disclosure; Corporate Structure; Allocation of Assets; Affiliates; Enforcement; Secured Creditor Model; Secured Credit Law; Credit Security Transparency; Commericial Transaction; Corporation; International Finance; Corporate Responsibility; Transparency (1)
- Shareholder Rights; Board of Directors; Bankruptcy; Fiduciary Duty; Heightened Fiduciary Duty; Sale of Control; Chapter 11; Control Rights; Restructuring; Penny Warrant; Private Placement; Redistribution of Benefits; Bankruptcy Procedure; Peabody Energy; Seadrill; CGG SA; Reorganization Plan; Control Transaction; Corporate Law (1)
Articles 1 - 10 of 10
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Equifax Data Breach And The Resulting Legal Recourse, Caitlin Kenny
The Equifax Data Breach And The Resulting Legal Recourse, Caitlin Kenny
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
What happens when one’s sensitive information falls into the wrong hands? With the twenty-first century’s advancement of technology comes the increasing problem of data breaches wherein sensitive information is exposed. On September 7, 2017, Equifax, one of three major United States credit reporting agencies announced one of the largest data breaches in the history of the United States. The data breach affected approximately 145 million consumers and subsequently a wave of consumer class actions followed. This Note clarifies why class action lawsuits and arbitration are not viable legal remedies for massive data breaches where entities like credit reporting agencies are …
Transparency In Corporate Groups, Jay Lawrence Westbrook
Transparency In Corporate Groups, Jay Lawrence Westbrook
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
This Article addresses a remarkable blind spot in American law: the failure to apply the well-established principles of secured credit to prevent inefficiency, confusion, and fraud in the manipulation of the webs of subsidiaries within corporate groups. In particular, “asset partitioning” has been a fashionable subject in which the central problem of non-transparency has been often mentioned but little addressed. This Article offers a concept for a new system of corporate disclosure for the benefit of creditors and other stakeholders. It would require disclosure of corporate structures and allocations of assets among affiliates to the extent the affiliates are to …
Bankruptcy Fiduciary Duties In The World Of Claims Trading, John A. E. Pottow
Bankruptcy Fiduciary Duties In The World Of Claims Trading, John A. E. Pottow
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
In earlier work, I explored the role of fiduciary duties in the bankruptcy trustee’s administration of a debtor’s estate, noting the absence of any explicit demarcation of those duties in the Bankruptcy Code. In this piece, I report the highlights of that analysis and see to what extent (if any) fiduciary duties can inform policy prescriptions for the issue of bankruptcy claims trading, colorfully referred to by some as the world of “bankruptcy M&A.” My initial take is pessimistic. Fiduciary duties, at least as traditionally conceived in bankruptcy, are unlikely to provide much help. But there is still a source …
Corporate Governance And Bankruptcy, Daniel J.H. Greenwood
Corporate Governance And Bankruptcy, Daniel J.H. Greenwood
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
Ordinary corporate law invests enormous authority in corporate leaders, largely without accountability either to those they govern or to the judiciary, in defiance of much of what we know about effective governance procedure. Instead, we rely on the markets in which the corporation participates as the primary check on incumbent officials. Regardless of whether relying on markets is sufficient in the ordinary course, corporate insolvency is the markets’ verdict that incumbent management has failed. Accordingly, in bankruptcy and insolvency more generally, the law ought to abandon its ordinary deference to the corporate powers that be and instead impose standard good …
Private Benefits Without Control? Modern Chapter 11 And The Market For Corporate Control, Oscar Couwenberg, Stephen J. Lubben
Private Benefits Without Control? Modern Chapter 11 And The Market For Corporate Control, Oscar Couwenberg, Stephen J. Lubben
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
Outside of bankruptcy, a board of directors’ decision to take control rights away from existing shareholders and grant them to another is subject to heightened fiduciary duties. As the sale of control represents a kind of end game, shareholders have one last chance to realize the full value for their investment. In such a context, their interests warrant special protection. A similar sale of control can happen in a chapter 11 procedure when a bankruptcy plan revamps the capital structure of the firm. In such a restructuring of the firm, control rights can be newly created, redefined and redistributed to …
Badges Of Opportunism: Principles For Policing Restructuring Support Agreements, Edward J. Janger, Adam J. Levitin
Badges Of Opportunism: Principles For Policing Restructuring Support Agreements, Edward J. Janger, Adam J. Levitin
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
Bankruptcy is a market for corporate control. Current bankruptcy practice offers two alternative mechanisms for effectuating changes in control of a firm: (1) a pre-plan all-asset sale under section 363(b) of the Bankruptcy Code; or (2) an asset sale or recapitalization pursuant to a plan of reorganization under section 1129 of the Code. Pre-plan sales under section 363(b) are fast, but lack the procedural protections associated with a restructuring or sale pursuant to a plan. Plan confirmation can be costly and uncertain, however. Restructuring support agreements (“RSAs”)—contractual agreements to support a future restructuring that has certain agreed-upon characteristics—appear to offer …
The Market For Corporate Control In The Zone Of Insolvency: Symposium Introduction, Edward J. Janger
The Market For Corporate Control In The Zone Of Insolvency: Symposium Introduction, Edward J. Janger
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
No abstract provided.
Corporate Distress, Credit Default Swaps, And Defaults: Information And Traditional, Contingent, And Empty Creditors, Henry T. C. Hu
Corporate Distress, Credit Default Swaps, And Defaults: Information And Traditional, Contingent, And Empty Creditors, Henry T. C. Hu
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
Federal securities law seeks to ensure the quality and quantity of information that corporations make publicly available. Informational asymmetries associated with companies in financial distress, but not in bankruptcy, have received little attention. This Article explores some important asymmetries in this context that are curious in their origin, nature, and impact. The asymmetries are especially curious because of the impact of a world with credit default swaps (CDS) and CDS-driven debt “decoupling.” The Article explores two categories of asymmetries. The first relates to information on the company itself. Here, the Article suggests there is fresh evidence for the belief that …
Passing The Baton: The Effect Of The International Olympic Committee's Weak Anti-Doping Laws In Dealing With The 2016 Russian Olympic Team, Saroja Cuffey
Brooklyn Journal of International Law
Following the investigation of a Russian state-sponsored doping ploy prior to the Olympic Games in Rio 2016; the International Olympic Committee (IOC) decided against a blanket ban of the Russian Olympic team. Instead; it allowed athletes’ individual international federations to decide whether Russian athletes could compete. In following the various anti-doping laws in place; the IOC sought to protect and give justice to clean athletes around the world. This Note argues that they did not achieve this result; due to the anti-doping laws in place and the actors applying these laws. It suggests that there should be a universal anti-doping …
Investor-State Dispute Settlement: Is There A Better Alternative?, Emily Osmanski
Investor-State Dispute Settlement: Is There A Better Alternative?, Emily Osmanski
Brooklyn Journal of International Law
As the world has transitioned from national; isolated economies with localized issues into a globalized and interconnected economy with cross-border disputes; the law has struggled to keep up. Recent trade negotiations have highlighted the difficulty states face in promoting trade; while also creating a fair; accessible; and equitable forum for producers and consumers with nationalities touching every area of the globe. For several decades; Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) has been in place to address claims brought by foreign investors against the host states. External improvements have helped support foreign direct investment and the ISDS model of dispute resolution; such as …