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Bankruptcy

Faculty Scholarship

Fordham Law School

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

America Is Selling Its Seniors Short, Constantine N. Katsoris Jan 2019

America Is Selling Its Seniors Short, Constantine N. Katsoris

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Clearinghouses As Liquidity Partitioning, Richard Squire Jan 2014

Clearinghouses As Liquidity Partitioning, Richard Squire

Faculty Scholarship

To reduce the risk of another financial crisis, the Dodd-Frank Act requires that trading in certain derivatives be backed by clearinghouses. Critics mount two main objections: a clearinghouse shifts risk instead of reducing it; and a clearinghouse could fail, requiring a bailout. This Article’s observation that clearinghouses engage in liquidity partitioning answers both. Liquidity partitioning means that when one of its member firms becomes bankrupt, a clearinghouse keeps a portion of the firm’s most liquid assets, and a matching portion of its short-term debt, out of the bankruptcy estate. The clearinghouse then applies the first toward immediate repayment of the …


Law And The Rise Of The Firm , Henry Hansmann, Reiner Kraakman, Richard Squire Jan 2005

Law And The Rise Of The Firm , Henry Hansmann, Reiner Kraakman, Richard Squire

Faculty Scholarship

Organizational law empowers firms to hold assets and enter contracts as entities that are legally distinct from their owners and managers. Legal scholars and economists have commented extensively on one form of this partitioning between firms and owners: namely, the rule of limited liability that insulates firm owners from business debts. But a less-noticed form of legal partitioning, which we call "entity shielding," is both economically and historically more significant than limited liability. While limited liability shields owners' personal assets from a firm's creditors, entity shielding protects firm assets from the owners' personal creditors (and from creditors of other business …