Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Business Lawyer (1)
- Capital allocation (1)
- Capital asset pricing (1)
- Capital markets (1)
- Company registration (1)
-
- Control market (1)
- Corporate control (1)
- Corporate governance (1)
- Corporate law (1)
- Disclosure violation (1)
- Efficiency enhancement (1)
- Extraterritorial evasion (1)
- Fiduciary duty (1)
- Financing distortion (1)
- Global market (1)
- Investor empowerment (1)
- Investor protection (1)
- Management duty (1)
- Managerial compensation (1)
- Market efficiency (1)
- Michigan Law Review (1)
- New Economic Order (1)
- Periodic disclosure (1)
- Regulatory authority (1)
- Securities Exchange Commission (SEC); security; investment management; Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (1)
- Securities regulation (1)
- Share price (1)
- Stakeholders (1)
- Statutory obsolescence (1)
- Stockholders (1)
Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in Law
Investment Management Arrangements And The Federal Securities Laws, Harvey E. Bines, Steve Thel
Investment Management Arrangements And The Federal Securities Laws, Harvey E. Bines, Steve Thel
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
More Than Just New Financial Bingo: A Risk-Based Approach To Understanding Derivatives, Kimberly D. Krawiec
More Than Just New Financial Bingo: A Risk-Based Approach To Understanding Derivatives, Kimberly D. Krawiec
Faculty Scholarship
The large losses suffered by investors in financial derivatives during recent years have prompted a wave of litigation, as well as proposals from Congress and regulatory agencies for increased monitoring of derivatives markets. Many, including some members of Congress and even "industry experts," are uneasy with the growing use of derivatives. Yet many market participants and others knowledgeable about this growing industry insist that derivatives serve an important, and perhaps vital, purpose by allowing investors to better manage the financial risks associated with their business transactions.
I define the term derivative and briefly discuss the history, uses and types of …
Fiduciaries, Misappropriators And The Murky Outlines Of The Den Of Thieves: A Conceptual Continuum For Analyzing United States V. O’Hagan,, Kimberly D. Krawiec
Fiduciaries, Misappropriators And The Murky Outlines Of The Den Of Thieves: A Conceptual Continuum For Analyzing United States V. O’Hagan,, Kimberly D. Krawiec
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Stockholders, Stakeholders, And Bagholders (Or How Investor Diversification Affects Fiduciary Duty), Richard A. Booth Marbury Research Professor Of Law
Stockholders, Stakeholders, And Bagholders (Or How Investor Diversification Affects Fiduciary Duty), Richard A. Booth Marbury Research Professor Of Law
Faculty Scholarship
The traditional wisdom is that management should serve the interests of the corporation and the stockholders who own it by maximizing stockholder wealth. But a significant number of legal scholars argue that management duty should be more broadly construed to include other constituencies ("stakeholders"), such as employees, creditors, customers, suppliers, and the community at large. The broader view of management duty means that management has more discretion and that stockholders will seldom have recourse if management fails to maximize profits. Nevertheless, many states have adopted so-called other constituency statutes permitting management to consider such other interests. The difference between the …
The Shaping Force Of Corporate Law In The New Economic Order, Jeffrey N. Gordon
The Shaping Force Of Corporate Law In The New Economic Order, Jeffrey N. Gordon
Faculty Scholarship
My topic for this Allen Chair lecture is the shaping force of corporate governance in the new economic order. It is easy to think of corporate law as an arcane field with mysterious terms and peculiar rules, ultimately of interest only to those who are prepared to bill at least 2000 hours a year to unravel its complexities. This is the view that there is a pointless mystery about shareholders, directors, common stocks, debentures, and the bizarre creature my class encountered recently, a convertible exchangeable cumulative preferred stock; and that ultimately corporate law and practice consists of the expert manipulation …
Brave New World?: The Impact(S) Of The Internet On Modern Securities Regulation, John C. Coffee Jr.
Brave New World?: The Impact(S) Of The Internet On Modern Securities Regulation, John C. Coffee Jr.
Faculty Scholarship
It is now a trite commonplace that the advent of the Internet will in time revolutionize securities regulation. Merely the facts that the Internet has somewhere between thirty and sixty million users worldwide today (with an estimated ten to thirty million in the United States) and that some 800,000 U.S. investors already have online brokerage accounts establish that there is a potential global market that can be accessed at very low cost. But the magnitude of the market says little about what will be the character and effect of this approaching revolution.
Technological change is not a new phenomenon for …
Rethinking Disclosure Liability In The Modern Era, Merritt B. Fox
Rethinking Disclosure Liability In The Modern Era, Merritt B. Fox
Faculty Scholarship
The state of issuer disclosure in 1997 is like the proverbial half-filled glass. On one hand, as Dean Seligman has amply demonstrated in his contribution to this symposium, the glass is half empty in the sense that the legal incentives for established issuers to engage in high quality disclosure at the time that they sell new securities have decreased in recent decades. Due to the more liberal exemptions available under Regulation S, Rule 144A, Regulation D and Regulation A, a much smaller portion of such sales is even subject to the formal disclosure oriented registration process under Section 5 of …
Securities Disclosure In A Globalizing Market: Who Should Regulate Whom, Merritt B. Fox
Securities Disclosure In A Globalizing Market: Who Should Regulate Whom, Merritt B. Fox
Faculty Scholarship
One of the most dramatic examples of increasing interaction across national boundaries in recent years has been the burgeoning volume of transnational transactions in corporate equities. Most developed capitalist countries impose affirmative obligations on issuers of corporate equity to disclose certain information about themselves. While these obligations are imposed on issuers, they are triggered by transactions. The growth in transnational transactions is thus increasingly raising difficult issues concerning the reach of differing national regimes. Given the magnitude of legal resources devoted to compliance with such disclosure regulations, they promise to feature prominently in the larger discussion of the role of …