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Reconsidering Disclosure And Liability In The Transatlantic Capital Markets, Mark Brewer, Orla Gough, Neeta Shah Dec 2010

Reconsidering Disclosure And Liability In The Transatlantic Capital Markets, Mark Brewer, Orla Gough, Neeta Shah

Mark Brewer

In response to the current global financial crisis, governments around the world are introducing some of the most significant changes financial regulation since the Great Depression. However, these efforts fail to fundamentally alter the current overreliance on disclosure and fail to achieve international cooperation in deterring the next financial crisis. The article explores some of the limits of disclosure as a basis for financial regulation and to suggest international regulatory coordination of liability standards to help curtail the risky behavior that often leads to the pattern of boom and bust in the global financial markets. The purpose of this article …


When Enough Is Not Enough: Correcting Market Inefficiencies In The Purchase And Sale Of Residential Property Insurance, Kenneth S. Klein Nov 2010

When Enough Is Not Enough: Correcting Market Inefficiencies In The Purchase And Sale Of Residential Property Insurance, Kenneth S. Klein

Kenneth S Klein

Each year at least hundreds, and often thousands of Americans lose their homes to natural disasters striking populated areas, and tens of thousands lose their homes to single-instance fires, floods, or other catastrophes. A recurring storyline is that the majority of these homeowners are underinsured, meaning they have less insurance than it will cost to rebuild their homes. This Article analyzes whether that is indicative of correctible inefficiencies in the residential property insurance markets. The Article identifies two inefficiencies – (1) Inadequate information, which is impairing informed pricing decisions by purchasers; and (2) Dispute costs (such as litigation) in the …


Exchange Of Tax Information: The End Of Banking Secrecy In Switzerland And Singapore?, Jean-Rodolphe W. Fiechter Ll.M. Nov 2010

Exchange Of Tax Information: The End Of Banking Secrecy In Switzerland And Singapore?, Jean-Rodolphe W. Fiechter Ll.M.

Jean-Rodolphe W. Fiechter

At their London Summit in April 2009, the G20 Leaders proudly declared: “The era of banking secrecy is over.” The scope of this paper is to examine whether this statement is true. Is exchange of information really the panacea against tax evasion? Did it eradicate the banking secrecy cultivated for centuries by Switzerland and later also by Singapore or does the protection of privacy still have a role to play in the new global order? In the first chapter, I will depict the origins of the banking secrecy and its development in recent years until the breakthrough of the OECD …


Can The Federal Reserve Adopt An Inflation Targeting Regime Under The Current Statutory Arrangements?, Hong Kyoon Cho Oct 2010

Can The Federal Reserve Adopt An Inflation Targeting Regime Under The Current Statutory Arrangements?, Hong Kyoon Cho

Hong Kyoon Cho

This paper discussed legal perspectives in institutional framework of central banking, keyed to monetary policy framework. The statutory objectives of monetary policy provide an environment under which the central bank can design its monetary policy framework, in that the choice of the monetary policy framework could lie within the scope of the spirits embodied in the statutory objectives of monetary policy. Monetary policy framework could illuminate legal aspects of debate, as specifically seen in the Federal Reserve’s case that has adopted not an explicit but an implicit monetary policy framework, namely the Just-Do-It approach. Under the current legal mandate, i.e., …


How The Payday Predator Hides Among Us: The Predatory Nature Of The Payday Loan Industry And Its Use Of Consumer Arbitration To Further Discriminatory Lending Practices, Michael A. Satz Oct 2010

How The Payday Predator Hides Among Us: The Predatory Nature Of The Payday Loan Industry And Its Use Of Consumer Arbitration To Further Discriminatory Lending Practices, Michael A. Satz

Michael A Satz

This Article argues that Payday lending is a predatory lending practice that disproportionately targets minority customers, and that the Payday lending industry utilizes consumer arbitration agreements to further the industry’s discriminatory lending practices. The Article proposes that protections enacted into law to protect military service members from payday lenders should be universally enacted on a national level.


Executive Compensation: The Law And Incentives, Stas Getmanenko Oct 2010

Executive Compensation: The Law And Incentives, Stas Getmanenko

Stas Getmanenko

Excessive executive compensation frequently breeds resentment, undermines consumer faith in the financial system, and overly stigmatizes otherwise common business failures. Frequently, the opponents of lavish pay packages compare executive compensation to the compensation of rank-and-file workers. Such criticism reflects perfectly appropriate societal concerns over pay equity and distribution of wealth within a society. An entirely separate source of friction is the shareholders’ right to benefit from the corporation’s wealth. Shareholders’ dividend is directly reduced by the company’s expenses, one of which executive compensation. For most of today’s public companies the executive compensation expense is often negligible when considered in light …


The Mortgage Market Crisis: A Game Theory Analysis, Raquel Mato Sep 2010

The Mortgage Market Crisis: A Game Theory Analysis, Raquel Mato

Raquel Mato

The mortgage market experienced a global bubble during the early 2000s. The bubble burst in 2006, creating a global financial crisis with widespread repercussions. In this paper, I will discuss how the mortgage market normally works and what changes occurred leading up to the 2000s that allowed for the rapid expansion of the mortgage market. I will talk about contributing factors such as: deregulation of the market, government encouragement of homeownership, the mortgage backed securities market, existing legislation, and a general lack of responsibility by all parties involved. I will use various aspects of game theory to explain how this …


Is The Public Utility Holding Company Act A Model For Breaking Up The Banks That Are Too-Big-To-Fail?, Roberta S. Karmel Sep 2010

Is The Public Utility Holding Company Act A Model For Breaking Up The Banks That Are Too-Big-To-Fail?, Roberta S. Karmel

Roberta S. Karmel

ABSTRACT FOR “IS THE PUBLIC UTILITY HOLDING COMPANY ACT A MODEL FOR BREAKING UP THE BANKS THAT ARE TO-BIG-TO-FAIL?”

BY ROBERTA S. KARMEL

During the financial crisis of 2007-08 and the debates on regulatory reform that followed, there was general agreement that the “too-big-to-fail” principle creates unacceptable moral hazard. Policy makers divided, however, on the solutions to this problem. Some argued that the banking behemoths in the United States should be broken up. Others argued that dismantling the big banks would be bad policy because these banks would not be able to compete with universal banks in the global capital …


Do Accounting Rules Matter? The Dangerous Allure Of Mark To Market, Todd Henderson, Richard Epstein Sep 2010

Do Accounting Rules Matter? The Dangerous Allure Of Mark To Market, Todd Henderson, Richard Epstein

Todd Henderson

This paper examines the relative strength of two imperfect accounting rules: historical cost and mark to market. The manifest inaccuracy of historical cost is well known, and, paradoxically one source of its hidden strength. Because private parties know of its evident weaknesses they look elsewhere for information. In contrast, mark to market for hard-to-value assets has many hidden weaknesses. In this paper we show how it creates asset bubbles and exacerbate their negative collateral consequences once they burst. It does the former by allowing banks to adopt generous valuations in up-markets that increase their lending capacity. It does the latter …


Do Accounting Rules Matter? The Dangerous Allure Of Mark To Market, Todd Henderson, Richard Epstein Sep 2010

Do Accounting Rules Matter? The Dangerous Allure Of Mark To Market, Todd Henderson, Richard Epstein

Todd Henderson

This paper examines the relative strength of two imperfect accounting rules: historical cost and mark to market. The manifest inaccuracy of historical cost is well known, and, paradoxically one source of its hidden strength. Because private parties know of its evident weaknesses they look elsewhere for information. In contrast, mark to market for hard-to-value assets has many hidden weaknesses. In this paper we show how it creates asset bubbles and exacerbate their negative collateral consequences once they burst. It does the former by allowing banks to adopt generous valuations in up-markets that increase their lending capacity. It does the latter …


The Future Of Financial Dispute Resolution In Hong Kong: Promoting A Comprehensive “Multi-Tier Dispute Resolution System” With Reference To The “Lehman Brothers Mediation Scheme”, Shahla F. Ali, John Koon Wang Kwok Aug 2010

The Future Of Financial Dispute Resolution In Hong Kong: Promoting A Comprehensive “Multi-Tier Dispute Resolution System” With Reference To The “Lehman Brothers Mediation Scheme”, Shahla F. Ali, John Koon Wang Kwok

Shahla F. Ali

Recent global financial dislocation has provided an impetus for examining effective avenues for the resolution of financial disputes. Hong Kong, like many financial centers throughout the world, has been directly affected by the collapse of Lehman Brothers. Its response to the collapse has included a creative mix of regulatory strengthening and government sponsored mediation and arbitration. Each of these alternative mechanisms of resolution provides a useful case study of the prospects of the use of ADR in response to financial crises. The efficacy of such interventions will be reviewed and options for the future development of a multi-tier dispute resolution …


The U.B.S. Case: The U.S. Attack On Swiss Banking Sovereignty, Beckett G. Cantley Aug 2010

The U.B.S. Case: The U.S. Attack On Swiss Banking Sovereignty, Beckett G. Cantley

Beckett G Cantley

On August 1, 2006, the United States Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (“PSI”), a branch of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, released a report in conjunction with a Senate hearing that revealed alarming statistics regarding wealthy Americans’ love affair with offshore banking. The PSI report was a culmination of the subcommittee’s investigation into tax haven abuses, providing the most detailed look to date of high-level tax schemes. The report revealed such an alarming number of rich Americans are using offshore accounts to evade taxes that law enforcement is unable to control the growing misconduct. Senator Carl Levin …


Is Chapter 15 Universalist Or Territorialist? Empirical Evidence From United States Bankruptcy Court Cases, Jeremy Leong Aug 2010

Is Chapter 15 Universalist Or Territorialist? Empirical Evidence From United States Bankruptcy Court Cases, Jeremy Leong

Jeremy Leong

No abstract provided.


The Rise And Fall Of Managerial Adaptive Responses To Incentive Pay, Sharon Hannes Aug 2010

The Rise And Fall Of Managerial Adaptive Responses To Incentive Pay, Sharon Hannes

Sharon Hannes

A commonly-voiced argument ties the current financial crisis to prevailing executive compensation practices. Huge stock-option packages and annual bonuses, the claim goes, caused managers to concentrate on the short-run and overlook the downside of risk-taking. But why did crisis emerge only recently, even though such incentive pay schemes are hardly a new phenomenon? This paper argues that for a long period of time, from the beginning of the 1990s until the beginning of the twenty-first century, managers employed a variety of adaptive tactics in response to option-based compensation and other risk-inducing pay schemes. These practices enabled executives to enrich themselves …


Lessons In Price Stability From The U.S. Real Estate Market Collapse, Andrea J. Boyack Aug 2010

Lessons In Price Stability From The U.S. Real Estate Market Collapse, Andrea J. Boyack

Andrea J Boyack

The U.S. residential housing market collapse illustrates the consequences of ignoring risk while funding mortgage borrowing. Collateral over-valuation was a foundational piece of the crisis. Over the past few decades, secondary markets, securitization, policy and psychology increased the flow of funds into real estate. At the same time, financial market segmentation divorced risk from reward. Increased mortgage capital availability, unmitigated by proper risk allocation, led to real estate price inflation. Social trends and government policies exacerbated both the mortgage capital over-supply and the risk-valuation disconnect.

The Dodd-Frank Act inadequately addresses the underlying asset valuation problem. Federal regulation may support market …


State V Fowler: North Carolina Dwi Procedure Considered, Jeffrey Martin Aug 2010

State V Fowler: North Carolina Dwi Procedure Considered, Jeffrey Martin

Jeffrey Martin

This case has its origin in attempts by the government of North Carolina to reduce drunk driving fatalities and improve road safety.


A Justified Assault Upon The Citadel Of Privity And The First Amendment, Joseph G. Bunn Esq. Aug 2010

A Justified Assault Upon The Citadel Of Privity And The First Amendment, Joseph G. Bunn Esq.

Joseph G Bunn Esq.

The active involvement of credit rating agencies (“CRAs”) in the structured finance market and the recent financial crisis is an adequate basis for investors to pursue claims against CRAs for negligent misrepresentation. Traditionally, CRAs have qualified for protection from suit by investors under the privity doctrine and under the First Amendment. CRAs qualified for protection under the privity doctrine because CRAs are not typically in a contractual relationship with investors who utilize their ratings. CRAs qualified for protection under the First Amendment because courts viewed their ratings as “speech” regarding public matters. However, this dual protection is limited in certain …


Controlling Creditor Opportunism, Jonathan C. Lipson Aug 2010

Controlling Creditor Opportunism, Jonathan C. Lipson

Jonathan C. Lipson

This paper addresses problems of creditor opportunism. “Distress investors” such as hedge funds, private equity funds, and investment banks are opportunistic when they use debt to obtain control of a financially troubled firm and extract improper gains at the expense of the firm and its other stakeholders. Examples include the mis-use of private information to short-sell a borrower’s securities and creditor self-dealing.

Creditors can act opportunistically because legal doctrines that historically checked such behavior—e.g., “lender liability”—have not kept pace with fundamental changes in the market for control of distressed firms. The recent Dodd-Frank financial reform is not likely to change …


The Conundrum Of Covered Bonds, Steven L. Schwarcz Aug 2010

The Conundrum Of Covered Bonds, Steven L. Schwarcz

Steven L Schwarcz

Covered bonds, which have been part of European finance since the time of Frederick the Great, are now being widely touted as the answer to securitization’s imperfections. There is great confusion, though, about the nature of covered bonds and their relationship to secured bond financing and securitization. This article attempts to demystify covered bonds, examining how they fit within a larger financing framework, analyzing their legal rights and obligations, and comparing their costs and benefits. The benefits of covered bonds are similar to those of securitization; both can access low-cost capital market funding with low risk to their investors, and …


Stock Broker Standards Of Conduct – Principles, Rules And Fiduciary Duties, Thomas Lee Hazen Aug 2010

Stock Broker Standards Of Conduct – Principles, Rules And Fiduciary Duties, Thomas Lee Hazen

Thomas Lee Hazen

In recent years there has been concern as to the adequacy of broker-dealer regulation. SEC and self regulatory organization rulemaking addresses specific types of broker-dealer conduct but by and large the regulation has been based on principles and standards rather than voluminous detailed rules specifying prohibited conduct. In particular, a good deal of broker-dealer conduct is addressed under the umbrella of regulating according to fair and just principles of trade. Also, much of the SEC’s rulemaking authority is based on the ability to prohibit fraudulent, manipulative, and deceptive devices. It also has been suggested that broker-dealers should be subject to …


Stock Broker Standards Of Conduct – Principles, Rules And Fiduciary Duties, Thomas Lee Hazen Aug 2010

Stock Broker Standards Of Conduct – Principles, Rules And Fiduciary Duties, Thomas Lee Hazen

Thomas Lee Hazen

In recent years there has been concern as to the adequacy of broker-dealer regulation. SEC and self regulatory organization rulemaking addresses specific types of broker-dealer conduct but by and large the regulation has been based on principles and standards rather than voluminous detailed rules specifying prohibited conduct. In particular, a good deal of broker-dealer conduct is addressed under the umbrella of regulating according to fair and just principles of trade. Also, much of the SEC’s rulemaking authority is based on the ability to prohibit fraudulent, manipulative, and deceptive devices. It also has been suggested that broker-dealers should be subject to …


Settlement Payment Exception To Avoidance Powers In Bankruptcy: An Unsettling Method Of Avoiding Recovery From Shareholders Of Failed Closely Held Company Lbos, Irina V. Fox Aug 2010

Settlement Payment Exception To Avoidance Powers In Bankruptcy: An Unsettling Method Of Avoiding Recovery From Shareholders Of Failed Closely Held Company Lbos, Irina V. Fox

Irina V. Fox

This is the first scholarly article to analyze the recent jurisprudential expansion of 11 U.S.C. § 546(e), the settlement payment exception to bankruptcy avoidance powers. This provision was originally enacted by Congress to protect the securities market from the ripple effect of bankruptcy of one of the market players. In 2009, the Third, Sixth, and Eighth Circuits broadly interpreted section 546(e) so as to shield from avoidance leveraged buyouts (LBOs) of both public and closely held companies. This Article questions the results reached by these (and other) circuits by exploring the goals of avoidance powers in preventing equity holders from …


Do Accounting Rules Matter? The Dangerous Allure Of Mark To Market, Todd Henderson Aug 2010

Do Accounting Rules Matter? The Dangerous Allure Of Mark To Market, Todd Henderson

Todd Henderson

This paper examines the relative strength of two imperfect accounting rules: historical cost and mark to market. The manifest inaccuracy of historical cost is well known, and, paradoxically one source of its hidden strength. Because private parties know of its evident weaknesses they look elsewhere for information. In contrast, mark to market for hard-to-value assets has many hidden weaknesses. In this paper we show how it creates asset bubbles and exacerbate their negative collateral consequences once they burst. It does the former by allowing banks to adopt generous valuations in up-markets that increase their lending capacity. It does the latter …


Financial Market Regulation After The Crisis: The Case For Hedge Fund Regulation Via Basel Iii, Wulf A. Kaal Ph.D. Aug 2010

Financial Market Regulation After The Crisis: The Case For Hedge Fund Regulation Via Basel Iii, Wulf A. Kaal Ph.D.

Wulf A. Kaal Ph.D.

Hedge funds have been blamed for their part in the financial market crisis of 2008-09. The exact role and the scope of hedge funds’ involvement in the financial crisis is unclear. Regulators increasingly scrutinize the hedge fund industry worldwide. Regulation of hedge funds could help minimize moral hazard, social externalities and systemic risk generated by the hedge fund industry. The paper evaluates recent regulatory changes including the US Dodd-Frank Act, the European Union Directive on Alternative Investment Fund Managers and other pertinent regulation. Using the methodological tool of New Institutional Economics, the paper provides an impact analysis of regulatory changes, …


Financial Crisis And Civil Society, Claire R. Kelly Aug 2010

Financial Crisis And Civil Society, Claire R. Kelly

Claire R. Kelly

International financial law institutions struggle to confront financial crises effectively and flexibly, playing the role of both regulator and rescuer. At the same time these institutions confront demands for greater legitimacy in light of the public policy implications of their actions. Some might argue that greater participation by civil society may serve to foster greater legitimacy by improving representativeness, transparency, accountability, and reasoned decision making. But greater civil society access also has costs that can undermine both regulation and rescue efforts. I argue that we should not take it as a given that greater civil society participation lends greater legitimacy …


Do Accounting Rules Matter? The Dangerous Allure Of Mark To Market, Todd Henderson Aug 2010

Do Accounting Rules Matter? The Dangerous Allure Of Mark To Market, Todd Henderson

Todd Henderson

This paper examines the relative strength of two imperfect accounting rules: historical cost and mark to market. The manifest inaccuracy of historical cost is well known, and, paradoxically one source of its hidden strength. Because private parties know of its evident weaknesses they look elsewhere for information. In contrast, mark to market for hard-to-value assets has many hidden weaknesses. In this paper we show how it creates asset bubbles and exacerbate their negative collateral consequences once they burst. It does the former by allowing banks to adopt generous valuations in up-markets that increase their lending capacity. It does the latter …


Losing The War Against Dirty Money: Rethinking Global Standards On Preventing Money Laundering And Terrorism Financing, Richard K. Gordon Aug 2010

Losing The War Against Dirty Money: Rethinking Global Standards On Preventing Money Laundering And Terrorism Financing, Richard K. Gordon

Richard K Gordon

Global standards for preventing money laundering and terrorism financing are among the most widely observed standards in the world today. Unfortunately there is substantial evidence that they do not work. A main reason is that the division of responsibility for gathering and evaluating information about criminal finances is misaligned. Private sector parties are asked to do more than they reasonably can do given their expertise, access to key data, and incentives. At the same time, public law enforcement agencies are being asked to do too little. This Article argues that the way governments have divided tasks between the private and …


Take This House And Shove It: The Emotional Drivers Of Strategic Default, Brent T. White Aug 2010

Take This House And Shove It: The Emotional Drivers Of Strategic Default, Brent T. White

Brent T. White

An increasingly influential view is that strategic defaulters make a rational choice to default because they have substantial negative equity. This article, which is based upon the personal accounts of over 350 individuals, argues that this depiction of strategic defaulters as rational actors is woefully incomplete. Negative equity alone does not drive many strategic defaulters’ decisions to intentionally stop paying their mortgages. Rather, their decisions to default are driven primarily by emotion – typically anxiety and hopelessness about their financial futures and anger at their lenders’ and the government’s unwillingness to help. If the government and the mortgage industry wish …


Lessons From Single-Company Event Studies: The Importance Of Controlling For Company-Specific Events, Scott D. Hakala Aug 2010

Lessons From Single-Company Event Studies: The Importance Of Controlling For Company-Specific Events, Scott D. Hakala

Scott D Hakala

Single-company event studies are commonly employed in applied practice, such as in analyzing market efficiency, reliance, and damages in securities litigation. However, the presence of significant company-specific events among the observations used to estimate the market model results in significantly biased, overstated standard errors (a well-known omitted variables problem) and less reliable coefficient estimates in such studies. This is a frequently over-looked or neglected issue that renders the statistical inferences in single-company event studies employing using more traditional event study techniques biased and often unreliable. This paper demonstrates through simulation and actual examples that, even allowing for errors in implementation, …


Comment On Enterprise Duty To Serve Underserved Markets, David J. Reiss Jul 2010

Comment On Enterprise Duty To Serve Underserved Markets, David J. Reiss

David J Reiss

FHFA invited further comment on the merit of considering properties without affordable use restrictions as part of the Enterprises’ duty to serve, noting that affordable housing preservation “encompasses efforts to keep unsubsidized properties in good condition while maintaining affordability for low- and moderate-income households.” (Page 32102)

FHFA should be certain that any aid given to buildings without affordable use restrictions will actually be passed on in large part to their tenants, whether through lower rents or improved conditions. I question whether that is in fact the case.

There are two main rationales for subsidizing multifamily buildings without affordable use restrictions. …