Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Corporate Directors (3)
- Securities Law (3)
- United States Securities and Exchange Commission (3)
- Corporate Governance (2)
- Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (2)
-
- Acquisitions and Mergers (1)
- Appraisal (1)
- Class actions (1)
- Corporate Officers (1)
- Corporations (1)
- Cost Benefit Analysis (1)
- Delegation rule (1)
- Disclosure (1)
- Disclosures (1)
- Economic (1)
- Economics (1)
- Exit rights (1)
- Exit theory (1)
- Fraud (1)
- IPO Pricing (1)
- Investing (1)
- Investment (1)
- Judicial valuation (1)
- Law (1)
- Management (1)
- Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (1)
- Proxy (1)
- Publicly Held Corporations (1)
- Safe harbor (1)
- Securites (1)
Articles 1 - 11 of 11
Full-Text Articles in Securities Law
The Exit Theory Of Judicial Appraisal, William J. Carney, Keith Sharfman
The Exit Theory Of Judicial Appraisal, William J. Carney, Keith Sharfman
Faculty Publications
For many years, we and other commentators have observed the problem with allowing judges wide discretion to fashion appraisal awards to dissenting shareholders based on widely divergent, expert valuation evidence submitted by the litigating parties. The results of this discretionary approach to valuation have been to make appraisal litigation less predictable and therefore more costly and likely. While this has been beneficial to professionals who profit from corporate valuation litigation, it has been harmful to shareholders, making deals costlier and less likely to be completed.
In this Article, we propose to end the problem of discretionary judicial valuation by tracing …
Stock-Market Law And The Accuracy Of Public Companies’ Stock Prices, Kevin S. Haeberle
Stock-Market Law And The Accuracy Of Public Companies’ Stock Prices, Kevin S. Haeberle
Faculty Publications
The social benefits of more accurate stock prices—that is, stock-market prices that more accurately reflect the future cash flows that companies are likely to produce—are well established. But it is also thought that market forces alone will lead to only a sub-optimal level of stock-price accuracy—a level that fails to obtain the maximum net social benefits, or wealth, that would result from a higher level. One of the principal aims of federal securities law has therefore been to increase the extent to which the stock prices of the most important companies in our economy (public companies) contain information about firms’ …
Corporate Therapeutics At The Securities And Exchange Commission, Jayne W. Barnard
Corporate Therapeutics At The Securities And Exchange Commission, Jayne W. Barnard
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Rule 10b-5 And The "Unfitness" Question, Jayne W. Barnard
Rule 10b-5 And The "Unfitness" Question, Jayne W. Barnard
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Did The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act Work?, Michael A. Perino
Did The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act Work?, Michael A. Perino
Faculty Publications
In 1995 Congress passed the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (the PSLRA or the Act) to address abuses in securities fraud class actions. In the wake of Enron, WorldCom, Adelphia, and other high profile securities frauds, critics suggest that the law made it too easy to escape liability for securities fraud and thus created a climate in which frauds are more likely to occur. Others claim that the Act has largely failed because it did little to deter plaintiffs' lawyers from filing nonmeritorious cases. This article employs a database of the 1449 class actions filed from 1996 through 2001 to …
Sec Debarment Of Officers And Directors After Sarbanes-Oxley, Jayne W. Barnard
Sec Debarment Of Officers And Directors After Sarbanes-Oxley, Jayne W. Barnard
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
The Sec's Suspension And Bar Powers In Perspective, Jayne W. Barnard
The Sec's Suspension And Bar Powers In Perspective, Jayne W. Barnard
Faculty Publications
Enron has brought about demands from many quarters to grant the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) new powers. Among the powers the SEC now seeks is the power to bar or suspend securities law violators from serving as an oflicer or director of any public company. Currently, the law assigns this power only to federal district courts. In this Essay, Professor Barnard traces the history of the current law; examining why Congress has expressly withheld suspension and bar powers from the SEC. She then argues that the courts have exercised their suspension and bar powers wisely, and that recent developments …
Dynamic Economic Analyses Of Selected Provisions Of Corporate Law: The Absolute Delegation Rule, Disclosure Of Intermediate Estimates And Ipo Pricing, Royce De R. Barondes
Dynamic Economic Analyses Of Selected Provisions Of Corporate Law: The Absolute Delegation Rule, Disclosure Of Intermediate Estimates And Ipo Pricing, Royce De R. Barondes
Faculty Publications
This Article examines three separate aspects of the relationships between corporations and their securityholders from a dynamic economic perspective: (i) the feasibility of permitting shareholders to participate in the management of their corporations through the exercise of voting rights, (ii) Rule 3b-6, the safe harbor for projections (the Safe Harbor)8 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the 1934 Act),9 and (iii) the extraordinary returns available from investing in initial public offerings (IPO's). Three particular dynamic aspects are implicated in these situations.
When Is A Corporate Executive "Substantially Unfit To Serve"?, Jayne W. Barnard
When Is A Corporate Executive "Substantially Unfit To Serve"?, Jayne W. Barnard
Faculty Publications
The recently enacted Securities Enforcement Remedies and Penny Stock Reform Act of 1990 provides that, in an SEC enforcement action, a federal court may enjoin or "disbar" the defendant from serving in the future as an officer or director of a public company. A court may enter such an order if it finds that the defendant is "substantially unfit" to serve as a corporate executive; the Act, however, does not define "substantial unfitness." In this Article Professor Jayne Barnard provides a framework for defining this term and identifying the defendants to which the Remedies Act should apply. Professor Barnard begins …
Shareholder Access To The Proxy Revisited, Jayne W. Barnard
Shareholder Access To The Proxy Revisited, Jayne W. Barnard
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
The Fallacy Of Weighting Asset Value And Earnings Value In The Appraisal Of Corporate Stock, Elmer J. Schaefer
The Fallacy Of Weighting Asset Value And Earnings Value In The Appraisal Of Corporate Stock, Elmer J. Schaefer
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.