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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, …


From The Schoolhouse To The Poorhouse: The Credit Card Act's Failure To Adequately Protect Gen Y Consumers, Eboni Nelson Aug 2010

From The Schoolhouse To The Poorhouse: The Credit Card Act's Failure To Adequately Protect Gen Y Consumers, Eboni Nelson

Eboni S Nelson

Whether through personal experiences or through the experiences of our friends and family, most, if not all, of us are all too familiar with the credit card industry’s unrelenting attempts to saddle young, naïve college students with debt that they cannot afford to repay. Students thoughtlessly apply for and use credit cards without considering the negative effects credit card debt can have on their academic, personal, and financial wellbeing. In May 2009, Congress attempted to address the pervasive problem of young consumer indebtedness by passing the Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act of 2009. While this Article recognizes and …


Disintermediating Avarice: A Legal Framework For Commercially Sustainable Microfinance, Steven L. Schwarcz Aug 2010

Disintermediating Avarice: A Legal Framework For Commercially Sustainable Microfinance, Steven L. Schwarcz

Steven L Schwarcz

Although microfinance has emerged as a key tool to alleviate poverty, the need for microfinance lending vastly exceeds the amount of funds that can be raised from charitable donors. Commercial bank lending is supplementing donor money, but microfinance loans made by banks are expensive and sometimes even exploitive. This article examines how innovative legal structures can enable microfinance loans to be funded directly from lower-cost, and virtually limitless, capital market sources by removing, or “disintermediating,” the need for a bank intermediary. In that context, the article identifies and attempts to resolve the resulting law-and-business issues of first impression and also …


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. …


The Market For Subprime Lending: A Law And Economics Analysis Of Market Failures And Policy Responses, Diego Valiante Jul 2010

The Market For Subprime Lending: A Law And Economics Analysis Of Market Failures And Policy Responses, Diego Valiante

Diego Valiante

Subprime mortgages represent a relevant wealth accumulation tool for low-income borrowers, and may promote efficient social policies. However, as recently brought to attention by the financial crisis, origination and distribution services are affected by strong information asymmetries and cognitive biases (rational and irrational). The failure of the subprime mortgages market was triggered by a mixture of irrational and opportunistic behaviours, as well as a lack of regulation, supervision and efficient disclosure. This paper, therefore, sheds lights on four areas of this market, highlighting causes and proposing remedies to structural failures. Therefore, the paper discusses: the financial architecture of the subprime …


Shaping Reforms And Business Models For The Otc Derivatives Market. Quo Vadis?, Diego Valiante Jul 2010

Shaping Reforms And Business Models For The Otc Derivatives Market. Quo Vadis?, Diego Valiante

Diego Valiante

Regulators around the globe are setting new strategies to deal with the systemic importance of the €427 trillion ($604 trillion) over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives market. This paper explores the three major sources of disruptive effects in OTC derivatives: liquidity, counterparty risk and legal uncertainty. The author highlights risks that may affect the value chain of a derivative transaction and weaken the economic and legal rationales that justify their widespread use. On the policy side, commitments have been made at G-20 level to draft uniform rules on a global scale “to build a safer financial system”. This paper finds, however, that in …


The Trouble With Investment Banking: Cluelessness, Not Greed, William C. Bunting Jun 2010

The Trouble With Investment Banking: Cluelessness, Not Greed, William C. Bunting

W. C. Bunting

We assume that the set of marketable financial instruments can be divided into two distinct categories: (1) easy-to-price and (2) difficult-to-price, and then isolate two behavioral effects as most important with respect to securities trading in difficult-to-price securities; specifically, the house-money-effect and the earned-money-effect. It is shown that these behavioral effects discourage profitable investment in research effort. We then argue that the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (“PSLRA”) safe harbor should not apply to investment banks that issue/underwrite difficult-to-price securities. We also advocate for the return of the private investment banking partnership as the most sensible way in which to …


The Start Of A Revolution: How Shays’ Rebellion Continues Today, Gary P. Opper May 2010

The Start Of A Revolution: How Shays’ Rebellion Continues Today, Gary P. Opper

Gary P Opper

You might remember from your days in your high school history class the tale of Daniel Shays. He was a poor farmhand from Massachusetts that went on to lead a rebellion against the United States government, whom he and others felt were imposing crushing debt and taxes. Anyone who failed to pay such debts could end up in debtor’s prison and had their property seized.

Shays and his compatriots sought debt relief through lower taxes and receiving funds from the government. They attempted to stop the courts from taking their property by forcing the courts in western Massachusetts to close …


The Great Recession And The Future Of International Banking Cooperation, Webb Mcarthur May 2010

The Great Recession And The Future Of International Banking Cooperation, Webb Mcarthur

Webb McArthur

The credit crisis of 2008 will likely produce reforms of the financial regulatory structure in the U.S., rearranging powers between regulators, implementing new rules governing the sort of risk financial institutions may assume, and instituting new consumer-oriented protections. The crisis made it clear that transparency and coordination of our regulation is crucial to the wellbeing of the U.S. economy. It follows that we should reexamine our coordination on the international level, as the world grows more, not less, interconnected. The current international standards for financial institutions set out in the Basel II Framework have proven to be ineffective, and the …


Energy-Efficiency And Wind Energy: Investment Strategy For Venture Capital And Private Equity, Nicolas L. Boittin May 2010

Energy-Efficiency And Wind Energy: Investment Strategy For Venture Capital And Private Equity, Nicolas L. Boittin

Nicolas L Boittin

Some renewable sources of energy are becoming economically profitable and legislatures are providing greater legal predictability for investment in this area. Many states have implemented Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPSs) and the U.S. Congress extended the investment period for Investment Tax Credits (ITCs) recently. Wind energy is the most mature renewable technology and energy-efficiency offers high profit potential in the short term. These two areas thus provide great investment opportunities for venture capital funds interested in clean technology and private equity funds focusing in renewable energy buyouts.


Personal Bankruptcy And Tax Debt: An Examination Of The Usefulness Of Chapter 13 In Managing Irs Claims, Matthew Q. Mcpherson, Donald D. Hackney, Daniel L. Friesner, Candice L. Correia May 2010

Personal Bankruptcy And Tax Debt: An Examination Of The Usefulness Of Chapter 13 In Managing Irs Claims, Matthew Q. Mcpherson, Donald D. Hackney, Daniel L. Friesner, Candice L. Correia

Matthew Q McPherson

The bankruptcy code has been used, with varying degrees of success, to mitigate debtor obligations for certain classes of financial claims. Taxes are a unique class of claim. The IRS, as the enforcement tool of the Federal Government’s revenue generating operations, is armed with collection powers not available to ordinary creditors. These include, but are not limited to, liens, levies, attachments, assessment penalties, and, most significantly, the power to ignore debtor homestead protections. Bankruptcy can be very valuable to a debtor caught in an active IRS tax collection. For example, filing Chapter 13 bankruptcy stops the running of interest on …


The International Anti-Money Laundering And The Combating The Financing Of Terrorism Regulation: A Critical Analysis Of Compliance Determinants In International Law., Navin Beekarry Apr 2010

The International Anti-Money Laundering And The Combating The Financing Of Terrorism Regulation: A Critical Analysis Of Compliance Determinants In International Law., Navin Beekarry

Navin Beekarry

Concerns about risks of money laundering (ML) and terrorist financing (TF) to the stability of the international financial system have resurfaced in the context of the liquidity problems faced by financial institutions resulting from the recent credit crisis (2007). Because of their constantly evolving nature linked with new criminal activities and methodologies, ML and TF present threats of a systemic nature to the stability of the financial system. Addressing those changing faces of ML/TF and associated risks requires the design of a sufficiently flexible and adaptable international regulatory strategy. In this paper, I examine the international anti-money laundering and combating …


Universalising The American – Secured Credit And Uncitral, Gerard Mccormack Apr 2010

Universalising The American – Secured Credit And Uncitral, Gerard Mccormack

Gerard McCormack

Abstract - Universalising the American – Secured Credit and UNCITRAL This paper turns the spotlight on harmonisation and modernisation of secured credit law. The whole harmonization and modernization agenda appears to be driven by a desire to remove restrictions on the taking of security. This is because of a widespread belief that a “liberal” secured transactions regime promotes economic growth by widening the availability of credit. But the agenda also has its critics. The law of secured finance embodies cultural attitudes and public policy choices that vary greatly among States. Changes to legal doctrine often mirror changes that have taken …


Microfinance Regulation: Interest Rate Caps And Concept Of Usury, Gray L. Skinner, William H. Payne Mar 2010

Microfinance Regulation: Interest Rate Caps And Concept Of Usury, Gray L. Skinner, William H. Payne

Gray L Skinner

I. Between Scylla and Charybdis: The balancing act of lending to the poor (Abstract)

Over the past two decades, microfinance has grown rapidly, reaching markets around the world and garnering the attention of policy makers and the media. Microfinance is the practice of offering small-scale banking services to communities in developing nations to improve the client's productivity and quality of life. The microfinance industry has attracted investors and practitioners who wish to unlock the profit potential of new markets while also achieving a philanthropic goal. As microfinance has grown, however, so has the need for legal regulation. Experts and practitioners …


How "Big" Became Bad: America's Underage Fling With Universal Banks, Lawrence G. Baxter Mar 2010

How "Big" Became Bad: America's Underage Fling With Universal Banks, Lawrence G. Baxter

Lawrence G. Baxter

In little more than a decade gigantic new financial institutions have emerged in America. These organizations are quite different from their predecessors in that they share the highly complex, diversified characteristics of foreign “universal banks.” They are still in the process of developing experienced and mature operational and risk management systems. During this same period, the regulatory framework necessary to match the size, power and hazards generated by these new universal banks remains underdeveloped, and the primary framework around which the system is being constructed, namely Basel II, lies in tatters in the wake of the financial crisis of 2007-08. …


Taking Bubbles Seriously In Contract Law, John P. Hunt Mar 2010

Taking Bubbles Seriously In Contract Law, John P. Hunt

John P Hunt

This Article argues that bubbles driven by traders with poor judgment exist, can be identified on an aggregate level, and have negative effects on parties that are not involved in the bubble markets. If those premises are accepted, then failing to respect bubble contracts – rescinding bubble transactions – makes sense. Such a rule should deter the formation of bubbles. Moreover, the rule is not in serious tension with the principle of freedom of contract to the degree one might expect. The poor judgment exhibited during a bubble suggests that incapacity should, and mistake and fraud do, apply to a …


Quagmire: Is The Sec Stuck In A Misguided War Against Pipe Financing?, Douglas Hoffer Mar 2010

Quagmire: Is The Sec Stuck In A Misguided War Against Pipe Financing?, Douglas Hoffer

Douglas Hoffer

A popular non-traditional capital formation option is the “PIPE” deal: Private Investment in Public Equity. Over the last ten years, companies raised more than $100 billion using PIPE transactions. The Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has increased its regulatory oversight of PIPE transactions as they have become more popular. The SEC believes that some PIPE investors who take a short position in a PIPE issuer’s publicly traded shares violate Section 5 of the Securities Act by selling unregistered securities, and that PIPE investors who trade on knowledge of an impending PIPE transaction are guilty of insider trading. The purpose of …


Illinois Mortgage Foreclosure: Problems And Solutions, John N. Oest Mar 2010

Illinois Mortgage Foreclosure: Problems And Solutions, John N. Oest

John N Oest

No abstract provided.


The Financial Crisis And The Future Of Law And Economics, Wladimir D. Kraus Mar 2010

The Financial Crisis And The Future Of Law And Economics, Wladimir D. Kraus

Wladimir D. Kraus

A Failure of Capitalism is a multifaceted contribution to our understanding of the Great Recession. But, due to its overwhelmingly macroeconomic character and substance, the nuanced approach of the law and economics scholarship is virtually absent, and so is any plausible explanation of the financial crisis that touched off the great recession. This is puzzling, because attention to the economic consequences of the law seems to provide a much more powerful framework for understanding what caused the financial collapse, and it is a natural approach for scholars of law and economics to pursue.


Rethinking Preventive Measures For Money Laundering And Terrorism Financing, Richard K. Gordon Mar 2010

Rethinking Preventive Measures For Money Laundering And Terrorism Financing, Richard K. Gordon

Richard K Gordon

Preventive measures for money laundering and terrorism financing are among the most widely accepted and observed global standards. However, there is substantial evidence that they do not work well. A main reason is that private sector parties, mostly financial institutions but including few others, are tasked with duties for which they are ill suited, while too little is required of the public sector . While they are required to monitor client transactions and reporting those that raise suspicion of money laundering or terrorism financing, they do not have sufficient expertise or data access to do so. Also, as suggested by …


The Trans-Saharan Gas Pipeline - An Overview Of The Threats To Its Success And The Means To Prevent Its Failure, Loic Conan Mar 2010

The Trans-Saharan Gas Pipeline - An Overview Of The Threats To Its Success And The Means To Prevent Its Failure, Loic Conan

Loic Conan

The Trans-Saharan gas pipeline (TSGP) is a planned natural gas pipeline to transport gas from Nigeria to Algeria and, supply Europe by connecting to the existing pipelines across the Mediterranean coast.

The length of the pipeline would be around 4,300 kilometers (2,671 miles). It will start from the swampy areas of the Niger Delta basin, and then will go through cultivated lands and tropical forest of North Nigeria. In Niger, it will cross the Sahel region, a semi-arid tropical savanna preceding the Sahara desert. Almost half of the route will then roam arid immensities before getting over the Atlas Mountains …


Odious Debt: Modernizing Ancient Problems, Seth M. Reynolds Mar 2010

Odious Debt: Modernizing Ancient Problems, Seth M. Reynolds

Seth M Reynolds

So far the odious debt debate has primarily focused on proving the existence of a rule of customary international law. Rather than following this tradition, this paper will focus on another method for demonstrating that a certain legal principle should be applied in an international context; general principles of law and equity. The heart of the odious debt debate revolves around the assertion by some that a successor government is absolutely liable for every debt incurred by a previous regime. However, almost every domestic legal regime limits the ability of a creditor to recover from a successor in interest. This …


Lessons Learned From Bernard Madoff: Why We Should Partially Privatize The Barney Fife’S At The Sec, Mark S. Klock Mar 2010

Lessons Learned From Bernard Madoff: Why We Should Partially Privatize The Barney Fife’S At The Sec, Mark S. Klock

Mark S Klock

Financial markets do not function well when fraud is pervasive. Around September of 2009, the investigations into the SEC examinations of Bernard Madoff Investment Securities, LLC were completed and released to the public. The simple facts reveal an alarming level of incompetence and lack of financial literacy on the part of the guardians of the integrity of our financial markets. I suggest two important tools for addressing these problems. One is to supplement enforcement of anti-fraud rules with more private attorney generals by expressly creating a private right of action for aiding and abetting violations of securities laws. This will …


How Incentives Drove The Subprime Crisis, Charles W. Murdock Mar 2010

How Incentives Drove The Subprime Crisis, Charles W. Murdock

Charles W. Murdock

How Incentives Drove the Subprime Crisis

In order to address any systemic problem, whether the goal is to change the system, regulate the system, or change the incentives driving a system, it is necessary to appreciate all the drivers operating within the system. In the case of the subprime crisis, one of the drivers was the changing nature of the subprime loans, which was not factored into the models used by the investment bankers, the credit rating agencies, and the issuers of credit default swaps.

This paper is an attempt to look dispassionately at the subprime crisis from a particular …


Renters Evicted En Masse: Collateral Damage Arising From The Subprime Foreclosure Crisis, Creola Johnson Feb 2010

Renters Evicted En Masse: Collateral Damage Arising From The Subprime Foreclosure Crisis, Creola Johnson

Creola Johnson

ABSTRACT: America is experiencing its worst foreclosure crisis in history, and tenants are the silent victims of this crisis. In this Article, Professor Johnson describes the consequences of thousands of tenants of being evicted from residential properties obtained by lenders in foreclosure proceedings against the owners-landlords. The individual consequences include tenants’ renting substandard alternative housing, experiencing disruptions in family life, and even becoming homeless. Societal consequences include the costs imposed upon communities to provide social services to the evicted tenants and their families and the burden on cities in dealing with homes left vacant due to the lenders' inability to …