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- Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank); Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC); Rulemaking; Dodd-Frank Section 953(b); Administrative Procedure Act (APA); D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals; Pay Ratio disclosure; CEO Compensation; Congress; Soft Pay Cap; Median Compensation; Chevron Deference; Independent Compensation Committee; "Median Employee"; Item 402 of Regulation S-K; Say-on-Pay Votes; Cost of Compliance; De Minimis Exception; Congress; "Name and Blame"; Business Roundtable v. SEC; Chamber of Commerce v. SEC; American Equity Investment Life Insurance Co. v. SEC; "Uncertain Legal Status"; National Association of Manufacturers v. SEC; Arbitrary and Capricious Standard; Amending 953(B) (1)
- The Structure of Scientific Revolutions; Equity Market Regulation; Epistemological Foundations; Operative Paradigms; Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC); Thomas S. Kuhn; Self-Regulatory Paradigml Micro-Intervention Paradigm; Equity Structure Advisory Committee; Modern Securities Trading; Financial Regulation; New York Stock Exchange (NYSE); Securities Act of 1933; Securities and Exchange Act of 1934; "Paperwork Crisis"; 1995 Order of investigation against the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD); Order Handling Rules; New Deal Legislation; Arsene Pujo; Louis Brandeis; Charles Evan Hughes Report; The Pecora Committee; Other People's Money and How the Bankers Use It; Disclosure Rules; Secondary Market Trading; Maloney Act of 1938; Over-the-Counter Market; Self-Regulatory Organizations (SROs); National Market System (NMS); Subpoena Power; NASD 21(a) Report; Regulation of Electronic Trading Systems; Regulation of Alternative Trading Systems; Exchange Registration; Fair and Orderly Markets; NASDAQ; Universal Industry Self-Regulator; Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Securities Law
A Bridge Too Far: A Critical Analysis Of The Securities And Exchange Commission's Approach To Equity Market Regulation, John Polise
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
Using the framework articulated by Thomas S. Kuhn in his book, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, this Article traces the evolution of equity market regulation in terms of its epistemological foundations and operative paradigms. It examines the SEC’s growth from a more passive partner with the securities industry to being an aggressive and perhaps overly intrusive arbiter of equity market operations. This Article identifies two distinct paradigms of securities regulation—the “Self-Regulatory Paradigm” and the “Micro-Intervention Paradigm.” The Self-Regulatory Paradigm and the Micro-Intervention Paradigm are not compatible, and this Article explains how the intellectual dissonance between them ultimately allowed the Micro-Intervention …
Full Disclosure: Moving Beyond Disclosure Regulations To Affirmative Regulation Of Executive Compensation, Christopher Saverino
Full Disclosure: Moving Beyond Disclosure Regulations To Affirmative Regulation Of Executive Compensation, Christopher Saverino
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
In the period following the financial crisis of 2008, Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank), which compelled the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to engage in substantial rulemaking. The Dodd-Frank mandate in Section 953(b) required the SEC to promulgate a rule, which it eventually finalized and is currently known as Pay Ratio Disclosure. Historically, SEC rulemaking has received great deference when rules are judicially challenged. However, following the passage of Dodd-Frank, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals has begun to grant less deference to SEC rulemaking where it has found that the SEC has …