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- Antitrust law/Banks and banking (1)
- Branch banks (1)
- Commodity Futures Trading Commission (1)
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- Dodd-Frank (1)
- Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (1)
- Extraterritorial regulation (1)
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- Interstate banking (1)
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- Over-the-counter derivative regulation (1)
- Patent litigation (1)
- Regulatory arbitrage (1)
- Securities and Exchange Commission (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Law
Regulatory Arbitrage, Extraterritorial Jurisdiction, And Dodd-Frank: The Implications Of Us Global Otc Derivative Regulation, Christian Johnson
Regulatory Arbitrage, Extraterritorial Jurisdiction, And Dodd-Frank: The Implications Of Us Global Otc Derivative Regulation, Christian Johnson
Christian A. Johnson
No abstract provided.
Assessing A Decade Of Interstate Bank Branching, Christian A. Johnson, Tara Rice, Ph. D.
Assessing A Decade Of Interstate Bank Branching, Christian A. Johnson, Tara Rice, Ph. D.
Christian A. Johnson
Since its inception, US. banking regulation has effectively prohibited a bank from opening or owning a branch located outside of its home state, commonly referred to as interstate branching. Only since the passage of the Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act (IBBEA) of 1994 have banks been able to engage in interstate branching, albeit still subject to significant state restrictions. Despite IBBEA 's removal of those barriers, it still allowed the states to impose anticompetitive restrictions governing the entry of out-of-state banks through the establishment of branch offices. As a result, states that were opposed to entry used IBBEA …