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Full-Text Articles in Law
Fenceposts Without A Fence, Katherine E. Di Lucido, Nicholas K. Tabor, Jeffery Y. Zhang
Fenceposts Without A Fence, Katherine E. Di Lucido, Nicholas K. Tabor, Jeffery Y. Zhang
Vanderbilt Law Review
Banking organizations in the United States have long been subject to two broad categories of regulatory requirements. The first is permissive: a "positive" grant of rights and privileges, typically via a charter for a corporate entity, to engage in the business of banking. The second is restrictive: a "negative" set of conditions on those rights and privileges, limiting conduct and imposing a program of oversight and enforcement, by which the holder of that charter must abide. Together, these requirements form a legal cordon, or "regulatory perimeter," around the U.S. banking sector.
The regulatory perimeter figures prominently in several ongoing policy …
Nonbank Banks: Congressional Options, Davis W. Turner
Nonbank Banks: Congressional Options, Davis W. Turner
Vanderbilt Law Review
The Bank Holding Company Act I (BHCA) defines a bank as an institution that both accepts demand deposits and makes commercial loans. An institution choosing to perform only one of these two activities falls outside the scope of the BHCA and constitutes a "non-bank bank." The creators of a non-bank bank receive two principal benefits from the institution's status as a non-bank bank. First, a bank holding company acquiring a non-bank bank can avoid the geographical restrictions imposed by the Douglas Amendment to the BHCA. Second, a company outside of the banking industry may acquire a non-bank bank without becoming …
The Future Of Shared Automatic Teller Networks In The Wake Of Marine Midland Bank: A Call For Federal Legislation, Cynthia Y. Reisz
The Future Of Shared Automatic Teller Networks In The Wake Of Marine Midland Bank: A Call For Federal Legislation, Cynthia Y. Reisz
Vanderbilt Law Review
This Recent Development contends that the Second Circuit's reversal of the lower court decision only temporarily preserves the regional and national interchange systems that have become increasingly popular in the last several years. Federal legislation is necessary to ensure the development of electronic banking technology and to reestablish competitive equality in the dual banking system. Part II traces the treatment of ATMs and shared ATM networks by state legislatures, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and federal courts since the enactment of the McFadden Act. Part III discusses the Marine Midland Bank decision as the first case to …
Bank Merger Policy And The Third National Bank Decision, Benjamin J. Klebaner
Bank Merger Policy And The Third National Bank Decision, Benjamin J. Klebaner
Vanderbilt Law Review
As measured by regional standards, banking in Tennessee's capital for years centered around three very large institutions and one of middle size. The latter, Nashville Bank and Trust Company(hereinafter Nashville Bank), merged into Third National Bank (the second largest bank in the area) in August, 1964, after the Justice Department failed to secure a preliminary injunction blocking the merger. This left Davidson County (the county in which Nashville is located) with seven banks, four of which were quite small. Nashville Bank was less than one-fourth the size of third-ranking Commerce Union Bank, but almost seven times as large as the …
The International Bank For Reconstruction And Development--A New Departure In International Finance, Robert L. Garner
The International Bank For Reconstruction And Development--A New Departure In International Finance, Robert L. Garner
Vanderbilt Law Review
Early in World War II, financial and economic experts of the Allied Nations concluded that if economic health was to return with the peace, the family of nations would have to forego the bad economic manners which had become commonplace between the wars. The conviction that a new and better economic household for the world had to be planned resulted in the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, in July, 1944, in which representatives of 44 nations participated.
The Conference met to solve two major problems. The first of these grew out of the chaotic …