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Banking and Finance

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Articles 451 - 479 of 479

Full-Text Articles in Law

Intermediated Securities, Legal Risk, And The International Harmonisation Of Commercial Law, Luc Thevenoz Aug 2007

Intermediated Securities, Legal Risk, And The International Harmonisation Of Commercial Law, Luc Thevenoz

Luc Thevenoz

Investors do not physically hold their investment securities any more. Securities are held and transferred through a complex, sophisticated, and international network of financial intermediaries, including central securities depositories, investment banks, and brokers-dealers. Investors buy and sell their holdings by having book-entries made to their securities accounts; they provide collateral to secured lenders by book-entries or by control agreements. Because transfers and collateral transactions are critical to the liquidity of the financial markets and to financial stability, market participants and regulators have become increasingly concerned with the legal soundness, the internal consistency, and the international compatibility of national laws regulating …


Regulating Hedge Fund Managers: The Investment Company Act As A Regulatory Screen, Mercer E. Bullard Aug 2007

Regulating Hedge Fund Managers: The Investment Company Act As A Regulatory Screen, Mercer E. Bullard

Mercer E Bullard

The Blackstone IPO in June 2007 signaled a new strategy of exploiting all of the advantages of a public offering while avoiding critical regulatory constraints. Hedge fund managers such as Blackstone are the functional equivalent of private investment companies in which only sophisticated investors are eligible to invest. Regulators have ignored this economic reality, however, in permitting hedge fund managers to evade all of the restrictions that Congress imposed on publicly offered investment pools. Hedge fund managers should be subject to the Investment Company Act, which uses a combination of statutory and regulatory exemptions as screens to ensure the optimal …


The Uptick Rule Of Short Sale Regulation - Can It Alleviate Downward Price Pressures From Negative Earnings Shocks?, Lynn Bai Aug 2007

The Uptick Rule Of Short Sale Regulation - Can It Alleviate Downward Price Pressures From Negative Earnings Shocks?, Lynn Bai

Lynn Bai

This paper empirically examines the effect of the uptick rule (including the bid test applicable to NASDAQ stocks) of short sale regulations on stock prices and short selling activities immediately after negative earnings surprises that occurred during the period of May to November 2005. It compares price paths and short selling activities of stocks restricted by the uptick rule with stocks that were exempted from the rule as a result of the SEC’s Pilot Program. The study has not found any evidence that prices of stocks subject to the rule declined at a slower speed than prices of exempted stocks …


Bond Defaults And The Dilemma Of The Indenture Trustee , Steven L. Schwarcz, Gregory M. Sergi Aug 2007

Bond Defaults And The Dilemma Of The Indenture Trustee , Steven L. Schwarcz, Gregory M. Sergi

Steven L Schwarcz

This article, attached for your review, rethinks the standard of care for trustees of public bonds. The present standard is intolerably vague, generating cost and inefficiency in the public bond markets. Yet bondholder governance is increasingly recognized as a critical component of the larger realm of corporate governance, and indeed more than eighty percent of capital market financing raised by U.S. corporations now occurs through public bond offerings. This article examines how that standard of care should be modified to make indenture trustees more effective.


Systemic Risk, Steven L. Schwarcz Jul 2007

Systemic Risk, Steven L. Schwarcz

Steven L Schwarcz

This article is the first major work of legal scholarship on systemic risk, under which the world’s financial system can collapse like a row of dominoes. There is widespread confusion about the causes and even the definition of systemic risk, and uncertainty how to control it. This article attempts to provide a conceptual framework for examining what risks are truly “systemic,” what causes those risks, and how, if at all, those risks should be regulated.

It begins by carefully examining what systemic risk really means, cutting through the confusion and ambiguity to establish basic parameters. Economists and other scholars historically …


Search And Seizure On Steroids: United States V. Comprehensive Drug Testing And Its Consequences For Private Information Stored On Commercial Electronic Databases, Aaron S. Lowenstein May 2007

Search And Seizure On Steroids: United States V. Comprehensive Drug Testing And Its Consequences For Private Information Stored On Commercial Electronic Databases, Aaron S. Lowenstein

Aaron S Lowenstein

This article critiques the Ninth Circuit’s recent decision in United States v. Comprehensive Drug Testing. This case received some attention because it stems from the investigation into the use of steroids in Major League Baseball. It should have received much more attention, however, because of its troubling expansion of the government’s authority to access our private digital information without a warrant.

Executing a search warrant for information stored on a computer database poses special problems. Because targets of government investigations can easily conceal incriminating digital evidence, investigators often must search an entire computer hard drive in order to effectively execute …


Developing Governance And Regulation For Emerging Capital And Securities Markets, Ali Adnan Ibrahim Mar 2007

Developing Governance And Regulation For Emerging Capital And Securities Markets, Ali Adnan Ibrahim

Ali A Ibrahim

This paper discusses various legal and regulatory issues for developing strong capital and securities markets in the transition economies. Toward this end, the paper analyses the available literature, and emphasizes that: (i) the development of corporate governance should be gradual and must take into consideration the customary laws that impact on the ownership structures and related preferences for doing business in the emerging markets; and (ii) the foreign investment policies should be consistent with the development of corporate governance and vice versa.


Dr. Jones And The Raiders Of Lost Capital: Hedge Fund Regulation, Part Ii, John W. Verret Mar 2007

Dr. Jones And The Raiders Of Lost Capital: Hedge Fund Regulation, Part Ii, John W. Verret

John W Verret

Hedge funds can sometimes achieve remarkable returns. The market fees exceed that of other asset classes, leading some fund managers to engage in illicit behavior, including fraud, that violates their duty to their investors and tempts institutional investors to violate their fiduciary duty to their principals. I will examine the hedge fund registration requirement struck down during the summer of 2006, as well as the tools used by other regulators to oversee institutional investors. This study relies on a survey of literature on financial regulation, commentary on the hedge fund registration rule, models of self-regulation, and examples in other areas …


Turning A Blind Eye: Wall Street Finance Of Predatory Lending Feb 2007

Turning A Blind Eye: Wall Street Finance Of Predatory Lending

Patricia A. McCoy

Today, Wall Street finances up to eighty percent of subprime home loans through securitization. The subprime sector, which is designed for borrowers with blemished credit, has been dogged by predatory lending charges, many of which have been substantiated. As subprime securitization has grown, so have charges that securitization turns a blind eye to financing abusive loans. In this paper, we examine why secondary market discipline has failed to halt the securitization of predatory loans.

When investors buy securities backed by predatory loans, they face a classic lemons problem in the form of credit risk, prepayment risk, and litigation risk. Securitization …


To Make Or To Buy: In-House Lawyering And Value Creation, Steven L. Schwarcz Jan 2007

To Make Or To Buy: In-House Lawyering And Value Creation, Steven L. Schwarcz

Steven L Schwarcz

In recent years, companies have been shifting much of their transactional legal work from outside law firms to in-house lawyers, and some large companies now staff transactions almost exclusively in-house. Although this transformation redefines the very nature of the business lawyer, scholars have largely ignored it. This article seeks to remedy that omission, using empirical evidence as well as economic theory to help explain why in-house lawyers are taking over, and whether they are likely to continue to take over, these functions and roles of outside lawyers. The findings are surprising, suggesting that in-house lawyers may now be performing as …


Insider Waiting: The New Loophole Under 10b5-1, Maureen Mcgreevy Jan 2007

Insider Waiting: The New Loophole Under 10b5-1, Maureen Mcgreevy

Maureen McGreevy

In October, 2000, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) enacted Rule 10b5-1 which provides an affirmative defense for individuals charged with insider trading. The Rule states that a person is not deemed to have traded on the basis of material non-public information if, before he or she gained knowledge of that material, non-public information, the person had entered into a trading plan under which he or she contracted to sell the securities in question. As a result of this rule, many corporate executives have established what have become to be known as 10b5-1 trading plans in order to protect themselves …


Efficient And Inefficient Debt Restructuring: A Comparative Analysis On Voting Rules In Workouts, Hyun Chul Lee Jan 2007

Efficient And Inefficient Debt Restructuring: A Comparative Analysis On Voting Rules In Workouts, Hyun Chul Lee

Hyun-Chul Lee

Two jurisdictions, Korea and America, have contrasting legal rules governing voting in workouts: Voting Mandating Rule and Voting Prohibition Rule. Voting in a bond workout has long been prohibited in the Trust Indenture Act of the United States. In stark contrast, Korea enacted a unique statute that mandated a voting scheme in workout in an effort to resolve corporate insolvencies crisis and incompetent bankruptcy institutions. Voting facilitates the completion of workouts, but it gives majority creditors an opportunity to disproportionately benefit from workouts. I explore the contrariness of the two seemingly unrelated statutes, and bring their respective implications for efficiency …


What Hedge Funds Can Teach Corporate America: A Roadmap For Achieving Institutional Investor Oversight, Robert C. Illig Jan 2007

What Hedge Funds Can Teach Corporate America: A Roadmap For Achieving Institutional Investor Oversight, Robert C. Illig

Robert C Illig

Hedge funds and other private equity funds are aggressive monitors of corporate America. Their investment strategies are designed to squeeze agency costs and other inefficiencies out of underperforming companies. Mutual funds and public pension funds, by contrast, have remained relentlessly passive despite their many resources. Rather than seek to improve the performance of their portfolio companies, they generally prefer to exit any investments that turn sour. Why the difference? In this Article, Professor Illig compares the business environments and regulatory regimes affecting different types of institutional investors. He concludes that the primary reason that most institutional investors do not better …


Rethinking Disclosure In A World Of Risk-Based Pricing Dec 2006

Rethinking Disclosure In A World Of Risk-Based Pricing

Patricia A. McCoy

The residential mortgage market in the United States has changed significantly since the passage of current federal mortgage disclosure laws in the 1960s and 1970s. In this Article, Professor Patricia McCoy advocates for the reform of these traditional disclosure rules. After describing the evolution of the subprime mortgage market and providing a description of current federal disclosure laws, she explores how these new market dynamics cause the traditional disclosure rules to break down in the subprime market. Professor McCoy concludes with proposals to counteract false advertising practices, facilitate "meaningful comparison-shopping, and formulate streamlined disclosures addressing loan applicants' greatest concerns in …


Predatory Lending And Community Development At Loggerheads Dec 2006

Predatory Lending And Community Development At Loggerheads

Patricia A. McCoy

For decades, cities have invested in decaying neighborhoods, leading to increases in home values and home equity. As a result, these neighborhoods have become ready targets for predatory lenders, who market their abusive loans to financially unsophisticated homeowners with home equity and no relationships with traditional lenders. Some borrowers lose their homes; others forsake home repairs to avoid default and foreclosure. Neighborhoods that once were stable become littered with abandoned and neglected homes, resulting in increased crime, falling home values, rising demands for social services, and lower tax revenues.

In the wake of the devastation done by predatory lenders, the …


The Ecb And Target 2 - Securities: Questions On The Legal Basis, Marco Lamandini Dec 2006

The Ecb And Target 2 - Securities: Questions On The Legal Basis, Marco Lamandini

Marco Lamandini

The current European system of securities’ clearing and settlement is still rather fragmented along national boundaries, thereby making cross border operations costly and less efficient. As a response to this, the European Central Bank (“ECB”) is launching the project of a centralized public securities’ settlement platform, called “Target 2 Securities” (“T2S”), which would entitle each participant to settle, through a single Target2 account, any securities’ transaction performed through a Central Securities Depository that provides for settlement in central bank money in Euro. The legal basis of T2S is to be found in Article 105 (2) of the EC Treaty and, …


E Pluribus Unum -- Out Of Many, One: Why The United States Needs A Single Financial Services Agency, Elizabeth F. Brown Jan 2005

E Pluribus Unum -- Out Of Many, One: Why The United States Needs A Single Financial Services Agency, Elizabeth F. Brown

Elizabeth F Brown

The United States needs to consolidate the over 115 existing state and federal agencies that regulate banking, securities and insurance firms and their products and services into a single, federal financial services agency; a U.S. Financial Services Agency (“US FSA”). The US FSA would be able to more effectively regulate the U.S. financial services industry than the existing regulatory regime. The current U.S. financial regulatory regime suffers from a range of problems, including an inability to anticipate and plan for future financial crises, an inability by regulators to quickly adapt to market innovations and developments, inconsistent regulations for financial products …


A Behavioral Analysis Of Predatory Lending Dec 2004

A Behavioral Analysis Of Predatory Lending

Patricia A. McCoy

No abstract provided.


Valoración De Una Tesis Sobre El Régimen De Las Cajas De Ahorro, Jesús Alfaro Águila-Real Jan 2004

Valoración De Una Tesis Sobre El Régimen De Las Cajas De Ahorro, Jesús Alfaro Águila-Real

Jesús Alfaro Águila-Real

Se trata de un libro que aborda la cuestión de la naturaleza jurídica de las Cajas de Ahorro. A lo largo de más de 700 páginas, la autora analiza, en primer lugar, los orígenes históricos de estas entidades de depósito y crédito para examinar, a continuación, si es correcto calificarlas como fundaciones y, más concretamente, como fundaciones empresa. Tras lo cual se refiere a los títulos que tiene el Estado para su regulación, títulos limitados tanto por la naturaleza privada de las Cajas como por la asunción de competencias al respecto de las Comunidades Autónomas


Realigning Auditors' Incentives Dec 2002

Realigning Auditors' Incentives

Patricia A. McCoy

No abstract provided.


A Tale Of Three Markets Revisited Dec 2002

A Tale Of Three Markets Revisited

Patricia A. McCoy

No abstract provided.


Musings On The Seeming Inevitability Of Global Convergence In Banking Law Dec 2000

Musings On The Seeming Inevitability Of Global Convergence In Banking Law

Patricia A. McCoy

No abstract provided.


The Law And Economics Of Remedies For Predatory Lending Dec 2000

The Law And Economics Of Remedies For Predatory Lending

Patricia A. McCoy

No abstract provided.


Technology Shifts And The Law: Year 2000 Readiness For Banks And Thrifts Dec 1999

Technology Shifts And The Law: Year 2000 Readiness For Banks And Thrifts

Patricia A. McCoy

No abstract provided.


Review, International Banking By Michael P. Malloy Dec 1998

Review, International Banking By Michael P. Malloy

Patricia A. McCoy

No abstract provided.


Levers Of Law Reform: Public Goods And Russian Banking Dec 1996

Levers Of Law Reform: Public Goods And Russian Banking

Patricia A. McCoy

No abstract provided.


A Political Economy Of The Business Judgment Rule In Banking: Implications For Corporate Law Dec 1995

A Political Economy Of The Business Judgment Rule In Banking: Implications For Corporate Law

Patricia A. McCoy

No abstract provided.


Bank Control Of Title Insurance: Perils To The Public That Bank Regulators Have Ignored, Joyce Palomar Dec 1989

Bank Control Of Title Insurance: Perils To The Public That Bank Regulators Have Ignored, Joyce Palomar

Joyce Palomar

No abstract provided.


State Regulation Of Branch Banking, Philip N. Hablutzel Feb 1978

State Regulation Of Branch Banking, Philip N. Hablutzel

Philip N. Hablutzel

No abstract provided.