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Autonomía Patrimonial De La Persona Jurídica, David García 2011 SelectedWorks

Autonomía Patrimonial De La Persona Jurídica, David García

David García

No abstract provided.


Bubbles, Busts, And Blame, Robert C. Hockett 2011 Cornell Law School

Bubbles, Busts, And Blame, Robert C. Hockett

Cornell Law Faculty Publications

I argue that financial asset price bubbles and busts, such as those we have recently experienced in the mortgage and securities markets, are compatible with market efficiency, individual rationality, and even ethically unobjectionable behavior. The reason is that they constitute classic recursively self-amplifying collective action problems, the hallmark of which is the efficient aggregation of individually rational behaviors into collectively calamitous outcomes. In the present case, individuals rationally "legged the spread" between cheap borrowing costs and credit-fueled capital gains rates, neither of which market actors could affect in their individual capacities even when knowing that credit would have eventually to …


The Volcker Rule And Evolving Financial Markets, Charles K. Whitehead 2011 Cornell Law School

The Volcker Rule And Evolving Financial Markets, Charles K. Whitehead

Cornell Law Faculty Publications

The Volcker Rule prohibits proprietary trading by banking entities - in effect, reintroducing to the financial markets a substantial portion of the Glass-Steagall Act’s static divide between banks and securities firms. This Article argues that the Glass-Steagall model is a fixture of the past - a financial Maginot Line within an evolving financial system. To be effective, new financial regulation must reflect new relationships in the marketplace. For the Volcker Rule, those relationships include a growing reliance by banks on new market participants to conduct traditional banking functions.

Proprietary trading has moved to less-regulated businesses, in many cases, to hedge …


Turning The Watchdog Into A Lapdog: Why The Proposed Newspaper Bailout Is The Wrong Solution For A Failing Industry, Andrea Priest 2011 William & Mary Law School

Turning The Watchdog Into A Lapdog: Why The Proposed Newspaper Bailout Is The Wrong Solution For A Failing Industry, Andrea Priest

William & Mary Business Law Review

Current economic conditions have hastened the decline of the American newspaper trade, creating an industry-wide crisis. Following decades of declining advertising revenue and circulation rates, the newspaper industry has plunged into a historic downturn. In search of salvation for the American newspaper, some legislators and scholars have called upon the government to bail out the newspaper industry. This Note will explore the decline of the American newspaper industry, and examine proposals for government intervention to revive America’s newspapers. Although the industry crisis will not abate without action, this Note will conclude that governmental support would ultimately harm newspapers. Instead of …


Complex Financial Institutions And Systemic Risk, Manuel A. Utset 2011 Florida State University College of Law

Complex Financial Institutions And Systemic Risk, Manuel A. Utset

Scholarly Publications

No abstract provided.


Shifting Title And Risk: Islamic Project Finance With Western Partners, Alan J. Alexander 2011 University of Michigan Law School

Shifting Title And Risk: Islamic Project Finance With Western Partners, Alan J. Alexander

Michigan Journal of International Law

Project finance exemplifies modern globalized business transactions in that a single project can bring together numerous participants from across the world, and in that sense it is a truly international undertaking. A general definition of project finance is "the financing of an economic unit in which the lenders look initially to the cash flows from operation of that economic unit for repayment of the project loan and to those cash flows and other assets comprising the economic unit as collateral for the loan." The "economic unit" is often referred to as a Special Project Vehicle (SPV). Project finance is commonly …


The Federal Home Loan Bank System: A Vehicle For Job Creation And Job Retention, Cornelius K. Hurley, Rebecca Hicks Gallup 2011 Boston University School of Law

The Federal Home Loan Bank System: A Vehicle For Job Creation And Job Retention, Cornelius K. Hurley, Rebecca Hicks Gallup

Faculty Scholarship

This paper discusses three proposals aimed at reorienting the mission of the System and of the FHLBanks: (1) liberalizing the System's collateral requirements to make the use of small business and other job-creation loans a more viable source of collateral for advances; (2) expanding the membership requirements of the FHLBanks to allow those financial institutions that currently lend to small businesses to become members; and (3) creating a job creation program that uses some of the best practices of the System's Affordable Housing Program. Taken together or separately, these proposals utilize the unique structure of the FHLB System as described …


Making Sense Of The New Financial Deal, David A. Skeel Jr. 2011 University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School

Making Sense Of The New Financial Deal, David A. Skeel Jr.

All Faculty Scholarship

In this Essay, I assess the enactment and implications of the Dodd-Frank Act, Congress’s response to the 2008 financial crisis. To set the stage, I begin by very briefly reviewing the causes of the crisis. I then argue that the legislation has two very clear objectives. The first is to limit the risk of the shadow banking system by more carefully regulating the key instruments and institutions of contemporary finance. The second objective is to limit the damage in the event one of these giant institutions fails. While the new regulation of the instruments of contemporary finance—including clearing and exchange …


Consumer Financial Protection: It's A Smaller World After All.Pdf, Hilary Allen 2011 American University Washington College of Law

Consumer Financial Protection: It's A Smaller World After All.Pdf, Hilary Allen

Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals

Few of the reforms of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (“Dodd-Frank”) havebeen as controversial as the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. On the one hand,proponents envisioned the Bureau as “a single, highly motivated federal regulator, [that would apply] the sameregulation … to all similar products, regardless of the identity of the lender.” On the other hand, critics havecalled the Bureau “fatally flawed” and suggested that it has the potential to “stifle innovation and leave somemarket participants worse off.”


Dodd-Frank, International Remittances, And Mobile Banking: The Federal Reserve’S Role In Enabling International Economic Development, Colin C. Richard 2011 Northwestern Pritzker School of Law

Dodd-Frank, International Remittances, And Mobile Banking: The Federal Reserve’S Role In Enabling International Economic Development, Colin C. Richard

NULR Online

International remittances—"cross-border person-to-person payments of relatively low value" sent primarily by international migrants to family members in developing countries—alleviate poverty, support entrepreneurship, and foster the development of financial systems. Until recently, aside from prohibitions on financial interactions with countries such as Cuba or Burma, U.S. regulators have only indirectly addressed these monetary transfers. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank) changes this, providing direct, substantive regulation of the industry for the first time. Dodd-Frank calls on the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board) to craft more than a dozen regulations to enforce Dodd-Frank's remittance …


Implementation Of Title Vii Of The Wall Street Reform And Consumer Protection Act. Hearing Before The United States Senate, Committee On Agriculture, Nutrition And Forestry - 112th Cong., 1st Sess., Michael Greenberger 2011 University of Maryland School of Law

Implementation Of Title Vii Of The Wall Street Reform And Consumer Protection Act. Hearing Before The United States Senate, Committee On Agriculture, Nutrition And Forestry - 112th Cong., 1st Sess., Michael Greenberger

Congressional Testimony

The Relationship of Unregulated OTC Derivatives to the Meltdown. It is now accepted wisdom that it was the non-transparent, poorly capitalized, and almost wholly unregulated over-the-counter (―OTC‖) derivatives market that lit the fuse that exploded the highly vulnerable worldwide economy in the fall of 2008. Because tens of trillions of dollars of these financial products were pegged to the economic performance of an overheated and highly inflated housing market, the sudden collapse of that market triggered under-capitalized or non-capitalized OTC derivative guarantees of the subprime housing investments. Moreover, the many undercapitalized insurers of that collapsing market had other multi-trillion …


Justifying Board Diversity, James A. Fanto, Lawrence M. Solan, John M. Darley 2011 Brooklyn Law School

Justifying Board Diversity, James A. Fanto, Lawrence M. Solan, John M. Darley

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


The Dangerous Illusion Of International Financial Standards And The Legacy Of The Financial Stability Forum, Cally Jordan 2011 University of San Diego

The Dangerous Illusion Of International Financial Standards And The Legacy Of The Financial Stability Forum, Cally Jordan

San Diego International Law Journal

In the aftermath of the Asian Financial Crisis, and the criticism directed towards the International Monetary Fund, in particular, for not having seen it coming, the Financial Stability Forum (FSF) was created in 1999 under a mandate from the G7 ministers of finance and central bank governors. The Asian Financial Crisis arose suddenly, spread rapidly, and spared neither developed nor developing economies in the region, although some fared much better than others. In retrospect, the causes of the crisis were obvious and the consequences predictable. Contagion entered the financial lexicon. Thus, the role of the FSF was to promote financial …


Overseeing Controlling Shareholders: Do Independent Directors Constrain Tunneling In Taiwan?, Yu-Hsin Lin 2011 University of San Diego

Overseeing Controlling Shareholders: Do Independent Directors Constrain Tunneling In Taiwan?, Yu-Hsin Lin

San Diego International Law Journal

This Article intends to explore the extent to which independent directors constrain tunneling by controlling shareholders in Taiwan. Taiwan serves as an appropriate jurisdiction for research since the private benefits agency problem is prevalent among Taiwanese public companies. A further twist in Taiwan?s case is that independent directors were newly introduced to Taiwan?s corporate boards, which follow dual-board system where the traditional monitoring function is served by statutory supervisors, instead of board committees, which adds to the complexity in analyzing the effectiveness of independent directors in constraining tunneling activities. Part II reviews relevant literature and lays the foundation for this …


A Test Case In International Bankruptcy Protocols: The Lehman Brothers Insolvency, Jamie Altman 2011 University of San Diego

A Test Case In International Bankruptcy Protocols: The Lehman Brothers Insolvency, Jamie Altman

San Diego International Law Journal

Part II of this Article, explains the competing theories underlying bankruptcy systems: universalism and territorialism. Part III details various statutory solutions to international bankruptcy problems. Next, Part IV analyzes the provisions of the Lehman Protocol in depth. Part V then examines the precedent upon which the Lehman Protocol relies. Part VI assesses potential threats to the Protocol?s success. This leads to Part VII, which contains suggestions for future protocols. Finally, Part VIII concludes.


The Limits Of Eu Hedge Fund Regulation, Dan Awrey 2011 Cornell Law School

The Limits Of Eu Hedge Fund Regulation, Dan Awrey

Cornell Law Faculty Publications

This article examines the mechanics of the recently adopted EU Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive. On balance, the results of this examination are not encouraging. The EU has failed to mount a persuasive case for why the Directive represents an improvement over existing national regulatory regimes or prevailing market practices in several key areas. Furthermore, by attempting to shoehorn an economically, strategically and operationally diverse population of financial institutions into a single, artificial class of regulated actors, the EU has established what is in many respects a conceptually muddled regulatory regime. Most importantly, however, the Directive's approach toward the amelioration …


Extending The European Debt Discussion To Broader International Governance, Odette Lienau 2011 Cornell Law School

Extending The European Debt Discussion To Broader International Governance, Odette Lienau

Cornell Law Faculty Publications

Although Europe is no stranger to sovereign debt troubles, the focus of international debt governance for several decades has been on the developing world. Discussions surrounding the efficacy and appropriateness of crisis mechanisms have been shaped by this political reality. But the current focus on Europe itself may generate changes in how public and private actors view international debt governance and the legitimacy of crisis mechanisms. In these remarks, I will focus on two ways in which Europe might serve as a test case for broader governance practices. First, I will discuss the ramifications of the European Union’s potential adoption …


Optimal Balance Of Financial Instruments: Long-Term Management, Market Volatility & Proposed Changes In Rights And Liabilities Of Affected Parties, Nishant Choudhary 2011 The George Washington University

Optimal Balance Of Financial Instruments: Long-Term Management, Market Volatility & Proposed Changes In Rights And Liabilities Of Affected Parties, Nishant Choudhary

Nishant Choudhary

A short work: On optimal structure of financial instrument, to incentivize long-term management. Its affect on speculation and excessive market volatility, limitations in the rights of specific financial instruments pose to achieving this result and modifications or changes in the rights of the holders of these instruments, and the directors’ duties towards them.


The Dodd-Frank Act: Tarp Bailout Backlash And Too Big To Fail, Lissa Lamkin Broome 2011 University of North Carolina School of Law

The Dodd-Frank Act: Tarp Bailout Backlash And Too Big To Fail, Lissa Lamkin Broome

North Carolina Banking Institute

No abstract provided.


The Dodd-Frank Act: A New Deal For A New Age, Saule T. Omarova 2011 University of North Carolina School of Law

The Dodd-Frank Act: A New Deal For A New Age, Saule T. Omarova

North Carolina Banking Institute

No abstract provided.


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