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Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in Securities Law
After Corwin: Down The Controlling Shareholder Rabbit Hole, Ann M. Lipton
After Corwin: Down The Controlling Shareholder Rabbit Hole, Ann M. Lipton
Vanderbilt Law Review
As Delaware has developed its doctrine with respect to controlling shareholders, its view of their relationship to directors has evolved. This evolution has produced some pronounced inconsistencies with respect to the weight placed on director approval of controlling shareholder action. The recent Delaware Supreme Court decisions in Corwin v. KKR Financial Holdings LLC, Kahn v. M & F Worldwide Corp., and C & J Energy Services, Inc. v. City of Miami General Employees’ and Sanitation Employees’ Retirement Trust introduced further uncertainty into the mix by making the determination as to whether a transaction involves a controlling shareholder practically outcome determinative …
Calculating Sec Whistleblower Awards: A Theoretical Approach, Amanda M. Rose
Calculating Sec Whistleblower Awards: A Theoretical Approach, Amanda M. Rose
Vanderbilt Law Review
The Dodd-Frank Act provides that Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) whistleblower awards must equal not less than ten and not more than thirty percent of the monetary penalties collected in the action to which they relate; SEC Rule 21F-6 provides criteria that the SEC may consider in determining the award percentage within the statutory bounds. When applying the Rule 21F-6 criteria, the SEC is required to think only in percentage terms, ignoring the dollar payout the award will actually yield. Last June, the SEC proposed to change this, at least in cases where the existing methodology would yield an award …
International Multiple Derivative Actions, King F. Tsang
International Multiple Derivative Actions, King F. Tsang
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
This Article explores two choice of law issues in international multiple derivative actions: (1) the choice of substantive law that should govern multiple derivative actions and (2) the characterization of different aspects of the multiple derivative actions between substantive and procedural laws. After a comparison of choice of law approaches among various common law jurisdictions, the author advocates that the first choice of law issue--the substantive law to be applied to the action--should be governed by the law with the closest connections to the multiple derivative actions. This is the only practical choice given the complex nature of international multiple …
Boilerplate And The Impact Of Disclosure In Securities Dealmaking, Jeremy Mcclane
Boilerplate And The Impact Of Disclosure In Securities Dealmaking, Jeremy Mcclane
Vanderbilt Law Review
Capital markets dealmaking, like many kinds of business transactions, is built on a foundation of copied and recycled language what many call boilerplate. Regulators and the bar periodically call for less reliance on boilerplate, but despite these pressures, boilerplate remains a fixture of ever-growing securities disclosures. This Article explores why boilerplate persists and how it affects investors, showing that boilerplate may have a more complex role than commonly recognized. This Article does so by developing a theory on the effect of boilerplate in securities disclosure-a context that is little studied despite a wealth of literature on boilerplate in other settings--and …
Fintech And The Innovation Trilemma, Yesha Yadav, Chris Brummer
Fintech And The Innovation Trilemma, Yesha Yadav, Chris Brummer
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
Whether in response to roboadvising, artificial intelligence, or crypto-currencies like Bitcoin, regulators around the world have made it a top policy priority to supervise the exponential growth of financial technology (or "fintech") in the post-Crisis era. However, applying traditional regulatory strategies to new technological ecosystems has proven conceptually difficult. Part of the challenge lies in the tradeoffs involved in regulating innovations that could conceivably both help and hurt consumers and market participants alike. Problems also arise from the common assumption that today's fintech is a mere continuation of the story of innovation that has shaped finance for centuries.
This Article …
Revolving Elites: The Unexplored Risk Of Capturing The Sec, Randall S. Thomas
Revolving Elites: The Unexplored Risk Of Capturing The Sec, Randall S. Thomas
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
Fears have abounded for years that the sweet spot for capture of regulatory agencies is the “revolving door” whereby civil servants migrate from their roles as regulators to private industry. Recent scholarship on this topic has examined whether America’s watchdog for securities markets, the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), is hobbled by the long-standing practices of its enforcement staff exiting their jobs at the Commission and migrating to lucrative private sector employment where they represent those they once regulated. The research to date has been inconclusive whether staff revolving door practices have weakened the SEC’s verve. In this paper, we …
Oversight Failure In Securities Markets, Yesha Yadav
Oversight Failure In Securities Markets, Yesha Yadav
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
According to statute, securities exchanges play an essential role in ensuring compliance with applicable laws and industry standards. Long imagined as unique in their institutional capacity to bring traders together, collect information and exclude problem participants from the marketplace, exchanges have offered an efficient source of private discipline for public regulators. The classic conception of the exchange, however, no longer holds true in today’s markets. Rather than concentrate activity within a handful of exchanges, equity markets are fragmented across a network of 14 exchanges and around 40 lightly regulated, off-exchange alternative venues (colloquially, “dark pools”).
This Article shows that the …
Calculating Sec Whistleblower Awards: A Theoretical Approach, Amanda M. Rose
Calculating Sec Whistleblower Awards: A Theoretical Approach, Amanda M. Rose
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
The Dodd-Frank Act provides that SEC whistleblower awards must equal not less than 10 and not more than 30 percent of the monetary penalties collected in the action to which they relate; SEC Rule 21F-6 provides criteria that the SEC may consider in determining the award percentage within the statutory bounds. When applying the Rule 21F-6 criteria, the SEC is required to think only in percentage terms, ignoring the dollar payout the award will actually yield. Last June the SEC proposed to change this, at least in cases where the existing methodology would yield an award less than $2 million …