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Full-Text Articles in Law

Discovering The Role Of The Firm: The Separation Criterion And Corporate Law, Daniel F. Spulber Dec 2008

Discovering The Role Of The Firm: The Separation Criterion And Corporate Law, Daniel F. Spulber

Daniel F Spulber

Professor Daniel F. Spulber presents a theory of the firm based on the ability to separate the objectives of the firm from those of its owners. He introduces a separation criterion which defines a firm as a transaction institution such that the consumption objectives of the institution’s owners can be separated from the objectives of the institution itself. The separation criterion provides a bright line distinction between firms and other types of transaction institutions. Firms under this criterion include profit-maximizing sole proprietorships, corporations, and limited-liability partnerships. Institutions that are not classified as firms include contracts, clubs, workers’ cooperatives, buyers’ cooperatives, …


Sovereign Funds: Opportunities And Concerns, Myriam Kairouz Aucar Nov 2008

Sovereign Funds: Opportunities And Concerns, Myriam Kairouz Aucar

Myriam Kairouz Aucar

Sovereign funds are not a new notion. But they are attracting so much attention now because of their size, their rapid growth having quadrupled in size between 2003 and 2007 , and because they are investing in the US financial market institutions. This paper will explain the Sovereign Wealth Funds, address the concerns they raise as well as their importance, and try to get a view of how to balance the need for these funds with the dangers they represent. The paper also discusses some protective measures that have been emplemeted as well as some suggested protective measures.


When The Corporate Luminary Becomes Seriously Ill: When Is A Corporation Obligated To Disclose That Illness And Should The Securities And Exchange Commission Adopt A Rule Requiring Disclosure?, Allan Horwich Nov 2008

When The Corporate Luminary Becomes Seriously Ill: When Is A Corporation Obligated To Disclose That Illness And Should The Securities And Exchange Commission Adopt A Rule Requiring Disclosure?, Allan Horwich

Allan Horwich

WHEN THE CORPORATE LUMINARY BECOMES SERIOUSLY ILL: WHEN IS A CORPORATION OBLIGATED TO DISCLOSE THAT ILLNESS AND SHOULD THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ADOPT A RULE REQUIRING DISCLOSURE? By Allan Horwich* ABSTRACT Recent speculation and rumors about the health of senior corporate executives of public companies (most notably Steve Jobs of Apple Inc.) and the advanced age of many leaders in the corporate community prompt a consideration of when, if at all, there must be public disclosure of the ill health of a person whose involvement in a corporation is perceived as vital to the continued financial success or independence …


The Nonpecuniary Costs Of Sarbanes Oxley, Nicholas V. Vakkur Nov 2008

The Nonpecuniary Costs Of Sarbanes Oxley, Nicholas V. Vakkur

Nicholas v Vakkur

Sarbanes Oxley is widely considered the most comprehensive economic regulation since the New Deal. While research has evaluated its financial costs, relatively little is known about the non-financial impact of the law upon firms. We develop six hypotheses regarding the non-financial impact of Sarbanes Oxley, incorporating learning from a comprehensive literature review across multiple disciplines. To evaluate this theory, an original survey was developed and implemented on a random sample of Fortune 500 firms (n = 206). An ordered probit model was used to quantify the results. While many economists consider business surveys to be at least as important as …


A Troubled House Of Cards: Examining How The “Housing And Economic Recovery Act Of 2008” Fails To Resolve The Foreclosure Crisis, Chad Emerson Oct 2008

A Troubled House Of Cards: Examining How The “Housing And Economic Recovery Act Of 2008” Fails To Resolve The Foreclosure Crisis, Chad Emerson

Chad Emerson

No abstract provided.


The New Basel Accord: Taking Cues From The Asian Financial Crisis, Megha Sharma Sep 2008

The New Basel Accord: Taking Cues From The Asian Financial Crisis, Megha Sharma

Megha Sharma

In complex financial relations, banks have a crucial role to play. They are the promoters of growth and they contribute in strengthening economies. For the same reason, considerable emphasis is laid on ensuring that banks do not default. Banks are the custodians of savings and generator of funds. At the international front, a crucial initiative in this direction was taken by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. The Basel Committee has come out with two Accords till date, namely, the International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards, released in 1988 and International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards, …


Stripping Down The Subprime Crisis, Whitney R. Travis Sep 2008

Stripping Down The Subprime Crisis, Whitney R. Travis

Whitney R Travis

In Nobelman v. American Savings Bank, the Supreme Court held that a literal reading of the Bankruptcy Code disallowed a Chapter 13 debtor from modifying the rights of a mortgage lender’s claim, secured by a primary residence. The decision thereby required a Chapter 13 debtor to pay the entire amount of the mortgage lender’s claim in order to retain possession of his home. Considering the debtor can modify the rights of nearly every other creditor in bankruptcy, one might wonder why mortgage lenders hold such an elite status. In his concurring opinion, Justice Stevens stated:

At first blush it seems …


The Role Of Private Sector Investment In International Microfinance And The Implications Of Domestic Regulatory Environments, William A. Langer Sep 2008

The Role Of Private Sector Investment In International Microfinance And The Implications Of Domestic Regulatory Environments, William A. Langer

William A Langer

The Role of Private Sector Investment in International Microfinance and the Implications of Domestic Regulatory Environments

By William Langer

Microfinance – the practice of providing small, working capital loans and other financial services to poor individuals unable to obtain access to commercial sources of credit – has been able to transform the lives of over 100 million microentrepreneurs and their families in various regions throughout the world. Despite this impressive achievement, microfinance currently reaches only 10% of the estimated demand for microfinance services, comprised of approximately 1 to 1.5 billion self-employed poor persons worldwide. Practitioners agree that in order to …


Rolling Equilibriums At The Pre-Commons Frontier: Identifying Patently Efficient Royalties For Complex Products, F. Russell Denton Sep 2008

Rolling Equilibriums At The Pre-Commons Frontier: Identifying Patently Efficient Royalties For Complex Products, F. Russell Denton

F. Russell Denton

Patent pricing problems have roiled industry in recent years. The biggest challenge may be splintered in-licensing of dozens or even thousands of patents for a single behemoth product, where ubiquitous overlaps in invention utility frustrate rational splitting of royalties. That issue is especially daunting for software, computer chips and biotechnology. Judicial remedies are no better: courts have been unable to streamline or standardize the analysis for infringement dam-ages under the prevailing Georgia-Pacific rule. The historic weakness of financial science for intangible assets, along with cherry picking by parties, hobbles G-P’s 15-factor analysis. The universal fog in allocating royalties creates license …


Deeply And Persistently Conflicted: Credit Rating Agencies In The Current Regulatory Environment, Timothy E. Lynch Aug 2008

Deeply And Persistently Conflicted: Credit Rating Agencies In The Current Regulatory Environment, Timothy E. Lynch

Timothy E. Lynch

Credit rating agencies have a pervasive and potentially devastating influence on the financial well-being of the public. Yet, despite the recent passage of the Credit Rating Agency Reform Act, credit rating agencies enjoy a relative lack of regulatory oversight. One explanation for this lack of oversight has been the appeal of the potentially self-regulating nature of credit rating agencies that claim to rely deeply on their reputational standing within the financial world. There are strong arguments for doubting this reputational concern, including the conflicting self-interest of credit rating agencies whose profits are gained or lost depending on their ability to …


Complexity As A Catalyst Of Market Failure: A Law And Engineering Inquiry, Steven L. Schwarcz Aug 2008

Complexity As A Catalyst Of Market Failure: A Law And Engineering Inquiry, Steven L. Schwarcz

Steven L Schwarcz

This article examines how the complexities of modern investment securities and the assets underlying them can trigger a breakdown of financial markets and also analyzes what should be done to mitigate the potential for market failure. Because these complexities are characteristic of complexities in nonlinear engineering systems, the article’s analysis draws on the literature analyzing these systems.


Recognizing The “Bad Barrel” In Public Business Firms: Social And Organizational Factors In Misconduct By Senior Decision-Makers, James A. Fanto Aug 2008

Recognizing The “Bad Barrel” In Public Business Firms: Social And Organizational Factors In Misconduct By Senior Decision-Makers, James A. Fanto

James A. Fanto

The Article argues that laws dealing with business associations do not adequately address the group and organizational factors in misconduct by senior decision-makers of public firms. The law essentially adopts a “bad apple,” rather than a “bad barrel,” perspective: it considers senior-level misconduct to be essentially an individual matter, and group or organizational causes or factors to be insignificant in it. The Article contends that this approach contradicts the learning of those who study groups and organizations, social psychologists and organizational theorists. Since senior-level misconduct is often attributable to group and organizational factors, a response that focuses only upon punishing …


Complexity As A Catalyst Of Market Failure: A Law And Engineering Inquiry, Steven L. Schwarcz Aug 2008

Complexity As A Catalyst Of Market Failure: A Law And Engineering Inquiry, Steven L. Schwarcz

Steven L Schwarcz

This article examines how the complexities of modern investment securities and the assets underlying them can trigger a breakdown of financial markets and also analyzes what should be done to mitigate the potential for market failure. Because these complexities are characteristic of complexities in nonlinear engineering systems, the article’s analysis draws on the literature analyzing these systems.


Is Arbitration Under Attack? Exploring The Recent Judicial Skepticism Of The Class Arbitration Waiver And Innovative Solutions To The Unsettled Legal Landscape, Ramona L. Lampley Aug 2008

Is Arbitration Under Attack? Exploring The Recent Judicial Skepticism Of The Class Arbitration Waiver And Innovative Solutions To The Unsettled Legal Landscape, Ramona L. Lampley

Ramona L. Lampley

This article explores the hotly debated field of enforcing arbitration clauses with binding class-action waivers. While the enforcement of arbitration clauses generally, and those with class-action waivers specifically, has undergone much debate in the past three years in both the academic and judicial fora; this article casts a new look on the analysis. Instead of advocating simply for or against the enforcement of the class-action waiver, this article analyzes the dialogue between the consumer products industry and the consuming public, via the court system. This dialogue has resulted in a “new wave” of consumer products arbitration agreements: agreements that are …


The Reverse-Robin-Hood-Cross-Subsidy Hypothesis: Do Credit Card Systems Effectively Tax The Poor And Reward The Rich?, Steven Semeraro Aug 2008

The Reverse-Robin-Hood-Cross-Subsidy Hypothesis: Do Credit Card Systems Effectively Tax The Poor And Reward The Rich?, Steven Semeraro

Steven Semeraro

Robin Hood and his band of merry men infamously, if apocryphally, robbed from the rich and gave to the poor. Over the last decade, some economists have postulated that credit card companies do the opposite – forcing low-income cash customers to pay higher prices for retail goods that effectively fund the frequent flier miles and other rewards that go predominantly to affluent cardholders. Because the credit card systems prohibit surcharging, everyone pays the same price. But, these analysts reason, merchants inflate their prices across the board to cover the cost of credit card acceptance. While credit card customers are rewarded …


The Effect Of 2005 Bankruptcy Reform On Credit Card Industry Profits And Prices, Michael N. Simkovic Jul 2008

The Effect Of 2005 Bankruptcy Reform On Credit Card Industry Profits And Prices, Michael N. Simkovic

Michael N Simkovic

The U.S. Bankruptcy code changed dramatically with the passage of The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act Of 2005. This act increased the costs and decreased the benefits of bankruptcy to consumers. Supporters of the law claimed that it would benefit consumers as well as creditors, because reducing the losses faced by creditors would lower the cost of credit to consumers. Critics of the law depicted it as special interest legislation designed to profit credit card companies at the expense of consumers. This study tests whether the 2005 Bankruptcy Reform: (1) reduced the number of bankruptcies; (2) reduced credit …


Intellectual Property And Information Technology Due Diligence In Merger And Acquisition Transactions, Martin B. Robins Jul 2008

Intellectual Property And Information Technology Due Diligence In Merger And Acquisition Transactions, Martin B. Robins

Martin B. Robins

this article addresses both the theoretical and practical elements of M&A due diligence regarding IP and IT, with an emphasis on recent developments.


Intellectual Property And Information Technology Due Diligence In Merger And Acquisition Transactions, Martin B. Robins Jul 2008

Intellectual Property And Information Technology Due Diligence In Merger And Acquisition Transactions, Martin B. Robins

Martin B. Robins

No abstract provided.


Intellectual Property And Information Technology Due Diligence In Merger And Acquisition Transactions, Martin B. Robins Jul 2008

Intellectual Property And Information Technology Due Diligence In Merger And Acquisition Transactions, Martin B. Robins

Martin B. Robins

This article is intended to address both the theoretical and practical elements of M&A due diligence associated with intellectual property and information technology issues.


At The Intersection Of Property And Insolvency: The Insolvent Company's Encumbered Assets, Riz Mokal Jul 2008

At The Intersection Of Property And Insolvency: The Insolvent Company's Encumbered Assets, Riz Mokal

Riz Mokal

This is the working paper for an invited article published in (2008) 20(2) Singapore Academy of Law Journal 495.

When a company becomes subject to winding-up proceedings, it is widely thought to lose beneficial ownership of its property. The property is held, instead, on a ‘statutory trust’ to discharge the company’s liabilities. The attribution of this ‘proprietary’ effect to the commencement of winding-up has, however, created significant confusion. Faring particularly poorly is our understanding of the status of those of the company’s assets in which others held proprietary rights prior to this point, notably, assets the company’s title to which …


The False Panacea Of International Agreements For The U.S. Regulation Of Sovereign Wealth Funds, David A. Hall Jun 2008

The False Panacea Of International Agreements For The U.S. Regulation Of Sovereign Wealth Funds, David A. Hall

David A. Hall

Sovereign Wealth Funds (“SWFs”) create special problems for regulators concerned with protecting investors in the United States. Namely they are opaque investment vehicles investing the foreign reserves of another nation. This differentiates them from other opaque investment vehicles like hedge funds because while a hedge fund can be counted on to try to maximize returns (thanks to the discipline of the market), the same cannot necessarily be said of SWFs. A regulator seeking to get a more transparent understanding of a SWF's motives needs mechanisms to regulate SWF activities. The current legal tools provided by international agreements that are available …


Ecns Rip: How Regulation Nms Destroyed Electronic Communication Networks And All Their Market Improvements, Derek N. White Jun 2008

Ecns Rip: How Regulation Nms Destroyed Electronic Communication Networks And All Their Market Improvements, Derek N. White

Derek N White

No abstract provided.


Going From The Frying Pan Into The Fire? A Critique Of The U.S. Treasury’S Newly Proposed Section 987 Currency Regulations, Joseph L. Tobin Jun 2008

Going From The Frying Pan Into The Fire? A Critique Of The U.S. Treasury’S Newly Proposed Section 987 Currency Regulations, Joseph L. Tobin

Joseph L Tobin

In September 2006, the IRS proposed new regulations for taxation of currency gains and losses for U.S. corporations' foreign branches. The IRS has announced that it would like to finalize them as soon as possible, perhaps as early as the summer of 2008. The new regulations withdraw the old section 987 regulations of 1991. The IRS believes these new regulations are necessary in order to prevent taxpayers from taking "artificial" currency losses on assets such as land and machinery -- assets which do not vary with the exchange rate, according to the IRS. The new regulations propose to stop these …


Hedging Bets On Employees' Futures: Is Investing Pension Fund Assets In Hedge Funds A Breach Of Fiduciary Duty?, Maureen Whalen Jun 2008

Hedging Bets On Employees' Futures: Is Investing Pension Fund Assets In Hedge Funds A Breach Of Fiduciary Duty?, Maureen Whalen

Maureen McGreevy

Despite the fact that hedge funds remain an enigma to the majority of the country, more and more Americans are investing in them each year. Many of these new investments are direct investments in hedge funds made by wealthy investors who have enough assets to meet the minimum investment requirements set by funds. Increasingly, however, many others who do not meet these requirements are investing in funds nonetheless through various forms of indirect investments. Some of these indirect investments are made intentionally by investors who actively seek out the chance to participate in hedge funds, such as, for example, by …


International Strategic Alliance, Mohd Arif Jun 2008

International Strategic Alliance, Mohd Arif

Mohd Arif

A Strategic Alliance is a relationship between firms to creat more value than they can on their own


The Trademark Trap, Aneta Ferguson May 2008

The Trademark Trap, Aneta Ferguson

Aneta Ferguson

The currently existing scheme of two filing systems for recordation of security interests in trademarks causes a lot of legal uncertainty and numerous problems for lenders and trademark owners. The uncertainty about the rules of perfection and priorities increases costs associated with financing transactions involving trademarks and contributes to the complexity of those transactions. The empirical study of the security interests in trademarks shows that fifteen percent of creditors failed to fulfill the requirements of the currently existing dual filing system and as a consequence are left in a position of unsecured creditors. Legislative reform is very urgently needed in …


Ripping Off Grandma And Grandpa Without Hurting The Banks Of America: Allowing The Elderly And Other Easy Prey To Pay For The Crimes Of Immoral Individuals And Institutions, Brett D. Maxfield May 2008

Ripping Off Grandma And Grandpa Without Hurting The Banks Of America: Allowing The Elderly And Other Easy Prey To Pay For The Crimes Of Immoral Individuals And Institutions, Brett D. Maxfield

Brett D Maxfield

This paper looks at the abuses of the banks of America in the ways they influence the law of credit and debt collection and what can be done to reform the system.


Credit Cards And Bankruptcy, Todd J. Zywicki Mar 2008

Credit Cards And Bankruptcy, Todd J. Zywicki

Todd J. Zywicki

From 1980 to 2005 consumer bankruptcy filings increased five-fold. Conventional wisdom holds that a primary cause of rising bankruptcy filing rates was increased household financial distress caused by increased indebtedness caused in turn by increased credit card borrowing. In 2005, Congress enacted the bipartisan Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (BAPCPA). The legislation was enacted in response to twenty-five years of rising bankruptcy filings and a perception of widespread fraud and abuse that threatened the fairness and integrity of the system. BAPCPA marked the most profound and far-reaching overhaul of America’s bankruptcy system in over a generation. In the …


The Effect Of Enhanced Disclosure On Open Market Stock Repurchases, Michael N. Simkovic Mar 2008

The Effect Of Enhanced Disclosure On Open Market Stock Repurchases, Michael N. Simkovic

Michael N Simkovic

Publicly traded companies distribute cash to shareholders either through dividends or through anonymous repurchases of the companies’ own stock on the open market. Companies must announce a repurchase authorization, but do not actually have to repurchase any stock, and until recently did not have to disclose whether or not they were in fact repurchasing any stock. Scholars and regulators noticed that companies frequently announced repurchases but then appeared not to complete them. They feared that such announcements might be used by insiders to exploit public investors. To reduce opportunities for exploitive behavior, the SEC required that companies disclose their repurchase …


Directed Brokerage, Conflicts Of Interest, And Transaction Cost Economics, D. Bruce Johnsen Mar 2008

Directed Brokerage, Conflicts Of Interest, And Transaction Cost Economics, D. Bruce Johnsen

D. Bruce Johnsen

This paper relies on the economics of transaction costs to assess the likely effect on investor welfare of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC’s) prohibition on a puzzling business practice known as directed brokerage. Its key insight is that the quality of a broker’s execution of portfolio trades is difficult for a mutual fund adviser to assess until it is too late ─ that is, execution quality is an “experience good.” Low-quality brokerage can substantially reduce investor returns. To have the incentive to provide high-quality execution, a broker must expect to receive a stream of premium portfolio commissions in …