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Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Securities Law
Marginal Benefits Of The Core Securities Laws, Kevin S. Haeberle
Marginal Benefits Of The Core Securities Laws, Kevin S. Haeberle
Faculty Publications
To every thing there is a season. In the area of securities regulation in the United States, it is the season for expansion. This article shows why such expansion should not involve use of the core issuer disclosure, fraud, and insider trading laws to reduce information asymmetry in the stock market in the name of investor protection. I argue that any expansion of these laws focused on this secondary market should therefore be justified by distinct concerns (namely, efficiency ones). Moreover, any push to better serve and protect investors should be focused on other areas of securities law (such as …
Decentralized Finance: Regulating Cryptocurrency Exchanges, Kristin N. Johnson
Decentralized Finance: Regulating Cryptocurrency Exchanges, Kristin N. Johnson
William & Mary Law Review
Global financial markets are in the midst of a transformative movement. The creation of Bitcoin and Facebook’s proposed distribution of Diem mark a watershed moment in the evolution of the financial markets ecosystem. Purportedly, peer-to-peer distributed digital ledger technology eliminates legacy financial market intermediaries such as investment banks, depository banks, exchanges, clearinghouses, and broker-dealers.
Yet careful examination reveals that cryptocurrency issuers and the firms that offer secondary market cryptocurrency trading services have not quite lived up to their promise. Notwithstanding cryptoenthusiasts’ calls for disintermediation, evidence reveals that platforms that facilitate cryptocurrency trading frequently employ the long-adopted intermediation practices of their …
Designing Dual-Class Sunsets: The Case For A Transfer-Centered Approach, Marc T. Moore
Designing Dual-Class Sunsets: The Case For A Transfer-Centered Approach, Marc T. Moore
William & Mary Business Law Review
Dual-class stock (DCS) structures, and their implications for managerial accountability and corporate governance more broadly, have become prevalent concerns for corporate lawyers and policymakers. Recent academic and practitioner debates on DCS have tended to focus less on the general merits and drawbacks of DCS versus one share/one vote structures, and more on the specific common-ground concern as to whether and how such structures are subjected to contingent reversal or “sunset”. This Article compares the relative advantages and disadvantages of time-, ownership- and transfer-centered models of DCS sunset provisions. It argues in favor of the transfer-centered model on the grounds that: …
Selling The Stock Market Short, Kevin Haeberle
The Emergence Of The Actively Managed Etf, Kevin S. Haeberle
The Emergence Of The Actively Managed Etf, Kevin S. Haeberle
Faculty Publications
Since the first exchange-traded fund began trading in 1993, the ETF form has attracted enormous investment flows. However, this triumph of the ETF has been overwhelmingly limited to the world of passive investment. Due to a mix of recent market innovation and regulatory change, this state of affairs is changing today. As I explain in this Article, there is much reason to believe that the actively managed ETF is now set to emerge as a significant feature of the investment landscape. And this emergence has important implications for, among others, the main parties that play key roles in protecting investors …