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- Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (6)
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Articles 1 - 17 of 17
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Expanding Jurisdiction Of The Securities And Exchange Commission: Variable Annuities And Bank Collective Investment Funds, John W. Erickson
The Expanding Jurisdiction Of The Securities And Exchange Commission: Variable Annuities And Bank Collective Investment Funds, John W. Erickson
Michigan Law Review
The Securities and Exchange Commission is presently attempting to assert jurisdiction over certain aspects of two industries traditionally exempt from federal securities regulation-insurance and banking. The SEC claims that two recently developed investment vehicles-variable annuities in the insurance field and pooled funds of managing agency accounts in the banking field-are virtually the same as mutual funds, which are subject to SEC regulation under the Investment Company Act of 1940. (A mutual fund is essentially a fund (usually in corporate form), the participants' contributions to which are collectively invested in a portfolio of securities, each participation representing a pro rata interest …
Corporations -- Effect Of Statements Made In Stock Prospectus, Law Review Staff
Corporations -- Effect Of Statements Made In Stock Prospectus, Law Review Staff
Vanderbilt Law Review
In the case of United Funds, Inc. v. Carter Products, Inc.,' the City Circuit Court of Baltimore, Maryland, handed down a decision which" broke new legal ground." The case, involving the effect of statements made in stock prospect uses on a corporation's future actions, has provoked surprisingly little discussion by legal commentators, and none at all on the "new" ground it broke. The purpose of this comment is to examine the Carter Products decision, to attempt to place it in proper legal perspective, and finally to evaluate it as a new development in the law.
Bosland: Estate Tax Valuation In The Sale Of Merger Of Small Firms, Herman L. Trautman
Bosland: Estate Tax Valuation In The Sale Of Merger Of Small Firms, Herman L. Trautman
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Estate Tax Valuation in the Sale of Merger of Small Firms. By Chelcie C. Bosland.
Securities Regulation-Applicability Of Exchange Act Section 10(B) To Transaction Effected By Means Of Intrastate Telephone Call, Michael A. Warner
Securities Regulation-Applicability Of Exchange Act Section 10(B) To Transaction Effected By Means Of Intrastate Telephone Call, Michael A. Warner
Michigan Law Review
Plaintiff alleged that he had been defrauded in a sale of securities to the defendant. Plaintiff attempted to invoke section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1984, which prohibits various fraudulent practices in securities trading. In order to state a cause of action under 10(b), it was necessary for plaintiff to allege that a means or instrumentality of interstate commerce had been used directly or indirectly in connection with the sale. The sale in this case had been effected through telephone conversations over wires located within the city of Philadelphia. However, the wires carrying the calls could be used …
New And Comprehensive Duties Of Securities Sellers To Investigate, Disclose, And Have An "Adequate Basis" For Representations, Willoughby C. Johnson
New And Comprehensive Duties Of Securities Sellers To Investigate, Disclose, And Have An "Adequate Basis" For Representations, Willoughby C. Johnson
Michigan Law Review
The duties of investigation and disclosure imposed upon securities salesmen have been significantly enlarged by several recent cases generated by the Second Circuit's 1963 decision of Berko v. SEC. In a hearing before the Securities and Exchange Commission it was found that Berko was a salesman working out of an acknowledged "boiler room." His employer had provided its salesmen, including Berko, with fraudulent sales brochures, some of which were subsequently distributed by Berko. The action by the Commission against Berko arose out of the sale of a specific security to a customer who had received fraudulent sales brochures and …
The Special Study Of Securities Markets Of The Securities And Exchange Commission, William L. Cary
The Special Study Of Securities Markets Of The Securities And Exchange Commission, William L. Cary
Michigan Law Review
Moved perhaps by a certain institutional egoism, the Securities and Exchange Commission welcomes this thorough symposium upon the Report of Special Study of Securities Markets. Although the product of a separate study group, this report has nevertheless been the focal point of debate throughout the Commission during the past eighteen months. Representing both an intensive and extensive inquiry into the securities markets, it is unquestionably the most ambitious and comprehensive study since the passage of the securities acts thirty years ago. It is not a sensational document-quite consciously. In our opinion, raising standards in the securities industry could best …
Rule 10b-6: The Special Study's Rediscovered Rule, Jack M. Whitney Ii
Rule 10b-6: The Special Study's Rediscovered Rule, Jack M. Whitney Ii
Michigan Law Review
An attempt either to assign responsibility for the breakdown in communication or to secure a quantitative measure of the consequences of that breakdown would be bootless. I attempt here only to pinpoint some of the areas of seeming ambiguity within the rule, and to consider them in light of a variety of situations wherein, it is hoped, the problems will become clearer and more precise, thus facilitating the consideration of whether solutions are needed and what form they should take.
The Evolving Role Of Section 16(B), William H. Painter
The Evolving Role Of Section 16(B), William H. Painter
Michigan Law Review
The evils which section 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 was enacted to prevent are well known. As expressed in one of the committee reports, this so-called "shortswing trading" provision was intended "to protect the interests of the public against the predatory operations of directors, officers, and principal stockholders of corporations by preventing them from speculating in the stock of the corporations to which they owe a fiduciary duty." To curb such speculation, section 16(b) provides for recovery by the corporation, or by one or more stockholders acting in its behalf, of any "profit realized" from purchases and …
Over-The-Counter Market Quotations, Philip A. Loomis Jr., Eugene H. Rotberg
Over-The-Counter Market Quotations, Philip A. Loomis Jr., Eugene H. Rotberg
Michigan Law Review
Chapter VII of the Report of Special Study of Securities Markets of the Securities and Exchange Commission focused attention upon the little understood and often perplexing problems presented by the quotations for over-the-counter stocks which appear regularly in the newspapers-the so-called retail quotations system. The Report was quite critical of the existing retail quotations system, concluding that it was inconsistent with the general philosophy of full disclosure elsewhere applied in the administration of the federal securities laws and, in fact, operated "to conceal what elsewhere in the securities business is considered essential to be disclosed." While there does not appear …
A Reappraisal Of The Role Of Disclosure, Robert L. Knauss
A Reappraisal Of The Role Of Disclosure, Robert L. Knauss
Michigan Law Review
The objective of this paper is to assess the current role of disclosure in its various aspects in security regulation. Following a brief description of the current uses of disclosure in securities regulation, there are separate sections describing and evaluating (1) the obligation of disclosure imposed on issuers at the initial sale of securities, (2) the obligation of disclosure resting on issuers if they have securities which are traded, and (3) obligations of disclosure imposed on parties in the securities business other than issuers. This last section includes obligations of insiders, broker-dealers, and investment advisers, as well as duties of …
Current Problems In Securities Regulation, Robert N. Dorosin, Ira J. Jaffe, Rolfe A. Worden, James C. Lockwood, Willoughby C. Johnson
Current Problems In Securities Regulation, Robert N. Dorosin, Ira J. Jaffe, Rolfe A. Worden, James C. Lockwood, Willoughby C. Johnson
Michigan Law Review
This comment analyzes four areas of central significance to adequate protection for the investor: (1) qualifications of those in the securities industry who deal with the public; (2) dissemination of corporate publicity; (3) dissemination of investment advice; and (4) selling practices in the securities industry. The findings and recommendations of the Special Study are given special attention insofar as they bear upon the problems covered. In certain areas, however, recent developments in court and Commission decisions have brought about changes equally as significant as the findings and recommendations of the Special Study. Thus each section covers the background and recent …
Amendments Affecting Perfection Of Security Interests, Roy L. Steinheimer, Jr.
Amendments Affecting Perfection Of Security Interests, Roy L. Steinheimer, Jr.
Legal Scholarship by Dean Steinheimer
No abstract provided.
New Tricks For Old Dogs, Harry L. Snead Jr.
New Tricks For Old Dogs, Harry L. Snead Jr.
University of Richmond Law Review
On the first day of January, 1966, Virginia practitioners will receive a bagful of .new tricks. The UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE becomes effective in Virginia on that day. In adopting the Code during its 1964 legislative session Virginia became the twenty-ninth state to adopt the Code; the Virginia version of the Code follows, with but few exceptions, the official version sponsored by the Commissioners on Uniform State Laws.
Cash Flow: Misleading Connotations Of Dividend Distributions, Harold V. Lese, Barbara A. Lee
Cash Flow: Misleading Connotations Of Dividend Distributions, Harold V. Lese, Barbara A. Lee
Cleveland State Law Review
It is not often that a new term of art comes into use in a particular field of law with the effect of simultaneously changing the face of a booming industry and testing the adequacy of an important field of federal regulatory activity. Yet the term "cash flow," of relatively recent importance in the real estate industry, has cast in a new light old questions about permissible sources of corporate distributions to shareholders, and given currency to new and revolutionary criteria of enterprise valuation. More important, the practice of measuring distributions by cash flow rather than by net income can …
Securities--Expanded Concept Of Fraud--Investment Advisers Act Of 1940, Leon L. Hollon
Securities--Expanded Concept Of Fraud--Investment Advisers Act Of 1940, Leon L. Hollon
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Getting Stock Transferred – Are You Doing It The Hard Way?, Thomas H. Jolls
Getting Stock Transferred – Are You Doing It The Hard Way?, Thomas H. Jolls
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Corporations - Proxy Regulations - Federal Courts Can Grant Complete Relief In Shareholder's Suit For Violation Of Section 14(A) Of Securities Exchange Act Of 1934, Jack J. Bernstein
Corporations - Proxy Regulations - Federal Courts Can Grant Complete Relief In Shareholder's Suit For Violation Of Section 14(A) Of Securities Exchange Act Of 1934, Jack J. Bernstein
Villanova Law Review
No abstract provided.