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- Keyword
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- Activist; Company; Target Controlled Company; Activism; Controlled Companies; Shareholder-Empowering; Shareholder-Empoyerment; Shareholder; Election; Minority Directors; Directors; Principal-Principal; Agency; De jure; De facto; Corporate Governance; Appointment; Board Representation; Institutional Investor; Board Representation; Controller; Non-activist; Shareholder Engagement (1)
- Compliance and information technology; Dashboard compliance; Values compliance; Reasonable supervision; Broker-dealers; Investment advisers; Compliance officers; Compliance culture; Financial regulations; Data mining; Productivity of compliance officers; Technology oversight; Automated/ algorithmic trading; Letters of Credit; Big Data; Insider trading; Corporate governance (1)
- Compliance and technology; Self-regulatory organizations (SROs); Compliance; Financial regulations; Automated information gathering; Automated surveillance; Public disclosure; Information dissemination; Recordkeeping and reporting requirements; Dodd-Frank; Financial technology; Data analytics; Marketplace risks; Real-time regulation; Prophylactic regulation; “Regulation by enforcement” model; Empirical rulemaking; Culture of compliance; Homogenization of compliance practices; Cybersecurity; Human agency in compliance; Investment advisers; Broker-dealers; Regulatory performance standards; Revolving door; Corporate governance (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)
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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)
- Liquidity systemic risk risk bankruptcy financial contract financial contract jurisdiction international domino microprudential macroprudential valuation netting collaterial disposal systemic uncertainty procyclicality froth privilege mitigation over-the-counter OTC Risk Global Financial crisis Best practice Bankruptcy Code EU Financial Collateral Arrangements Directive FCD Financial contract privilege Assets Funding Collective distress resolution Distressed estate Immunity Priority Legislative Guide Insolvency United Nations Commission on International Trade Law UNCITRAL Creditor Debtor World Bank Secured Credit UNIDROIT Close-out Unification Secured credit Financial system International Swaps and Deivatives Association ISDA Regulation Mitigation Systematic crisis Capital Financial institution Financial liberalization Market discipline Credit boom Asset price bubble Price bubble Leverage Lender Excessive leverage Debt Vulnerability Channel Amplifier Mortgage default Asset value contagion Bonds Knightian uncertainty Tranches Investment Default Countercyclical Liquid market ICR Standard International Monetary Fund IMF Immunity Welfare Fairness Preservation mechanism Distribution mechanism Pari passu Commercial Tax Bankruptcy moratorium Acceleration rights Set-off rights Pre-bankruptcy Transaction Enforcement International Adjustment Repos Collateral Rehypothecate Derivative Cleared derivative CPP Clearinghouse Over-the-counter OTC Credit default swap CFS Margining European Union EU Title transfer Security Financial collateral arrangement Risk mitigation Secured claims Borrow Security interest Counterparty risk Exponentiate Close-out Procyclical Rehypothecation Domino risk Financial crisis Bankruptcy Code Long-Term Capital Management LTCM Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Act BAPCA Variation margining (1)
- Securities regulation; Investment advisers; Third party examiners; Third party examination models; Self-regulatory Organizations (SROs); Arbitrary and Capricious Standard; Administrative Procedure Act (APA); Administrative Rulemaking; Section 206(4) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940; “Reasonably designed to prevent fraud” test; Unauthorized tax; Congress’s Power of the Purse; Securities regulation; Compliance policies and procedures; Adviser examinations; Nationally recognized statistical rating organizations (NRSROs); Proxy advisory firms; Certified Financial Analyst (CFA) Institute/CFA; Public company auditors; Chief Compliance Officers (CCOs); Compliance audits and reviews; Internal controls; Cost-benefit analysis; Financial regulation (1)
Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in Securities Law
Activist Shareholders At De Facto Controlled Companies, Gaia Balp
Activist Shareholders At De Facto Controlled Companies, Gaia Balp
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
Activist campaigns are likely to increasingly target controlled companies. Studies concerning activism at controlled companies focus on shareholder-empowering tools, such as the right to nominate and elect minority directors on the board, as a pathway for limiting the principal-principal agency problem. However, not enough attention has been paid to the distinction between de jure and de facto controlled companies. Building on a recent case concerning a leading Italian corporation, this Article analyzes the possible unexpected corporate governance consequences of successful activist intervention at de facto controlled companies, showing that, where minority shareholders are granted the right to appoint directors on …
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 …
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 …
Preserving Human Agency In Automated Compliance, Onnig H. Dombalagian
Preserving Human Agency In Automated Compliance, Onnig H. Dombalagian
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
As technology transforms financial services, so too must it transform the regulation of financial markets and intermediaries. The imperative of real-time, prophylactic regulation increasingly compels reallocation of regulatory and compliance budgets to surveillance and enforcement technology. At the same time, in light of the well-known weaknesses of automated systems, securities firms (and their regulators) must temper investment in automation with efforts to augment the agency of compliance professionals. This symposium contribution considers how investment in the professional development of compliance personnel can better integrate automated tools within established compliance and supervisory structures and thereby advance regulatory and operational objectives.
Dashboard Compliance: Benefit, Threat, Or Both?, James Fanto
Dashboard Compliance: Benefit, Threat, Or Both?, James Fanto
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
This Article poses the basic question that is reflected in its title and that was the subject of the conference where the Article was initially presented: whether technology poses any threats to the mission of compliance and the position of compliance officers, whether it is just another useful tool for them, or whether it is something of both. It begins by explaining the origin of compliance in broker-dealers and investment advisers and its important current position in those firms. It then discusses why compliance officers have always been drawn to technology, particularly to keep up with the business sides of …
Mandatory Third Party Compliance Examinations For Investment Advisers: An Sec Waterloo?, Mercer Bullard
Mandatory Third Party Compliance Examinations For Investment Advisers: An Sec Waterloo?, Mercer Bullard
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC or Commission) appears to be on the verge of requiring investment advisers to undergo third party examinations. One justification for the rulemaking is that the Commission lacks sufficient resources to examine advisers frequently enough. Another is to create indirectly a self-regulatory organization (SRO) for investments advisers. Both may leave a rulemaking particularly vulnerable to challenge as arbitrary and capricious under the Administrative Procedures Act. This Article considers three novel grounds on which a rulemaking may be successfully challenged. Congress has repeatedly rejected SEC requests to provide additional funding for examinations or to create an …
Liquidity, Systemic Risk, And The Bankruptcy Treatment Of Financial Contracts, Rizwaan J. Mokal
Liquidity, Systemic Risk, And The Bankruptcy Treatment Of Financial Contracts, Rizwaan J. Mokal
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
No abstract provided.