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Investing In Distressed Italian Companies Under The Reformed Italian Bankruptcy Law - A Comparison With The Us Bankruptcy Code, Pierantonio Musso Nov 2011

Investing In Distressed Italian Companies Under The Reformed Italian Bankruptcy Law - A Comparison With The Us Bankruptcy Code, Pierantonio Musso

Pierantonio Musso

This article presents a scheme to profitably invest in distressed Italian companies by taking advantage of the Italian Bankruptcy Law in comparison with the US Bankruptcy Code. The risks connected to the insolvency proceeding are analyzed under their economic effects and foreseen in their general appearance. Specific remedies to avoid or mitigate the potential risks are provided. Singular advantages, available only in the proposed investment scheme under the Italian Law, are described. As a result the investment produces a less risky and more profitable outcome than an investment in a non-distressed and non-Italian target company.


When Parallel Tracks Cross: Applying The New Insider Trading Regulations Under Dodd-Frank Derails, Gregory J. Melus Oct 2011

When Parallel Tracks Cross: Applying The New Insider Trading Regulations Under Dodd-Frank Derails, Gregory J. Melus

Gregory J Melus

Abstract: When Parallel Tracks Cross: Applying the New Insider Trading Regulations under Dodd-Frank Derails On March 11, 2011, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) brought an administrative proceeding against former Goldman Sachs Director, Rajat Gupta for participating in the insider trading scheme of Raj Rajaratnam. The complaint was the first application of the SEC’s expanded authority under the Dodd-Frank Act to charge an unregistered entity for securities violations in an SEC enforcement hearing. This Comment argues that bringing an SEC administrative proceeding against Rajat Gupta would not succeed because the retroactive application of the Dodd-Frank law would fail the …


Rating The Regulation Of Rating Agencies: Credit Rating Agency Reform In The Aftermath Of The Global Financial Crisis, Nan S. Ellis Sep 2011

Rating The Regulation Of Rating Agencies: Credit Rating Agency Reform In The Aftermath Of The Global Financial Crisis, Nan S. Ellis

Nan S Ellis

In this article, we identify five issues related to performance of credit rating agencies and consider the Dodd-Frank Act in light of these five interrelated issues. Others have commented on credit rating agency performance and offered proposed solutions. Our article is unique, however, in that it offers a comprehensive examination of these interrelated issues. We recognize that any regulatory reform must consider all aspects of the issue rather than to deal with isolated, incremental reform. Moreover, we offer an interdisciplinary approach which considers the relevant finance literature as well as legal commentary.


Electronic Discovery: A Survey Of E-Discovery, Its Effect On Corporate Constitutional Rights And Why Corporations May Receive The Fifth Amendment Privilege Against Self-Incrimination During Parallel Civil And Criminal Litigation, Percy Arnell King Sep 2011

Electronic Discovery: A Survey Of E-Discovery, Its Effect On Corporate Constitutional Rights And Why Corporations May Receive The Fifth Amendment Privilege Against Self-Incrimination During Parallel Civil And Criminal Litigation, Percy Arnell King

Percy Arnell King Esq.

Advancing technology has created more places to seek out relevant information than ever before which, has created a burden for corporations tasked with retaining this information to comply with applicable laws and the prospect of civil or criminal litigation. This article explores how the modern trend of storing information electronically and subsequent electronic discovery allowed in parallel civil and criminal trials is inherently unfair to corporations. Furthermore, corporations have been granted several rights derived from the Bill of Rights, and should also receive the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination.


Delaware’S Relevance In Chapter 22: Who Is “Courting Failure” Now?, Ruth S. Lee Sep 2011

Delaware’S Relevance In Chapter 22: Who Is “Courting Failure” Now?, Ruth S. Lee

Ruth S Lee

This study presents surprising new statistical evidence that contributes to the current “over-heated” academic debate about the Delaware courts’ role in Chapter 11 failure. In 2001, Professor LoPucki published an influential article suggesting that when large corporations file for bankruptcy under Chapter 11, they fail at a dramatically higher rate in Delaware courts than in other jurisdictions. He attributed this to corruption. His article enraged many academics and practitioners, and ignited many articles in the past two decades. This study presents startling evidence that while Chapter 11s filed in Delaware courts did have much higher failure rates from 1991-1996, after …


The Stakeholder Principle, Corporate Governance And Theory – Evidence From The Field And The Path Onward, P M Vasudev Sep 2011

The Stakeholder Principle, Corporate Governance And Theory – Evidence From The Field And The Path Onward, P M Vasudev

Palladam M Vasudev

The article provides an overview of the development of the stakeholder idea, and presents the results from a survey of the American, British and Canadian corporations included in the Fortune 500 Global Corporations (2009) for their adoption of the stakeholder principle. The survey finds near-unanimous acceptance of the stakeholder vision. 97 percent of the US, UK, and Canadian companies included in the survey acknowledge the stakeholder principle in some form. The trend of adoption of the stakeholder model is unmistakable, and this has significant implications for corporate theory. The article also examines how the emerging ideas about stakeholders and the …


Analysis Of Organizational Ethics, Evan Slavitt Sep 2011

Analysis Of Organizational Ethics, Evan Slavitt

Evan Slavitt

Whether an organization is ethical or not has become an increasingly important question both in public and legislative discourse as well as in the application of tort and criminal law. Historical approaches to organizational ethics have either attempted to evade the problem or sought to use paradigms developed for individuals. This Article reviews the various models that have already been proposed and explains why those models are unsatisfactory, focusing particularly on the attempts to articulate an organizational substitute for individual intent. The article then proposes a new framework that differentiates the various aspects of organizations and clarifies how ethical questions …


Strategic Management And The Role Of Legal Norms In Creating Corporate Value, Nadelle Grossman Sep 2011

Strategic Management And The Role Of Legal Norms In Creating Corporate Value, Nadelle Grossman

Nadelle Grossman

Delaware corporate law currently requires that directors oversee their firm’s systems to monitor risk so that they can limit their firm’s losses from such risks. Corporate law does not, however, require either directors or officers to oversee the interrelated process of managing that firm’s strategy for gains. Yet managing both risk and strategy are essential to a firm in creating value. In fact, as I argue in the paper, the current focus by business courts and academic commentators only on risk management oversight to prevent losses could actually undermine a firm’s management of its strategy for gains. I therefore propose …


What Shapes Controlling Party’S Behavior?: Factors Behind Private Benefits Of Control, Federico Pastre Sep 2011

What Shapes Controlling Party’S Behavior?: Factors Behind Private Benefits Of Control, Federico Pastre

Federico Pastre

Several legal and non-legal factors determine and shape controlling party’s behavior and its ability of extracting private benefits of control through opportunistic conducts that harm minority shareholders.

Initially, the paper briefly focuses on the concept of PBC and on the ways its magnitude can be assessed. Starting from the quality of the laws enacted and the level of enforcement granted to them in a given law environment (“law matter” thesis), to other law-related factors such as the level of competition, the labor in the firm, reputational constraints upon management, disclosure standards and the attitude of the judiciary, the paper analyzes …


Keep Your Friends Close But Your Auditors Closer: Corporations Risk Waiver When Independent Auditors Request Work Product, Daniel Reach Sep 2011

Keep Your Friends Close But Your Auditors Closer: Corporations Risk Waiver When Independent Auditors Request Work Product, Daniel Reach

Daniel Reach

In the current transparency-driven regulatory environment, corporations’ efforts at compliance are rife with uncertainty. The work product doctrine is a core safeguard of a lawyer’s work, which may contain sensitive information that corporations would not want disclosed to opposing parties. Meanwhile, independent auditors serve in a perilous capacity as they provide necessary services to their corporate clients while risking potentially adverse exposure of the information these clients and their counsel disclose to them. The work product doctrine is a time-honored and rule-driven protection that guards the mental impressions and work efforts of lawyers from discovery by opposing parties. Public accounting …


Corporate Leadership And The Unfinished Diversity Movement, Evan M. Roberts Mr. Sep 2011

Corporate Leadership And The Unfinished Diversity Movement, Evan M. Roberts Mr.

Evan M Roberts Mr.

This comment explores topics relating to diversity in the board room. It begins by covering the benefits a diverse board brings to firm, focusing on the business case rationales of saving firms money, strengthening core business concepts and corporate governance and increasing shareholder value. Next, the comment explores why, despite the apparent value a divers e board brings to a firm, corporations remain largely homogenized at the highest levels. Current legal, social and economic principles such as tournament theory and labor market externalities appear to shed light on what specific problems diversity advocates must contend with if they hope to …


How Shareholder Litigations Deter Directors And Officers. U.S. And Italy, A Comparative Analysis, Federico Pastre Sep 2011

How Shareholder Litigations Deter Directors And Officers. U.S. And Italy, A Comparative Analysis, Federico Pastre

Federico Pastre

This paper focuses on the issue of whether shareholder litigations brought in the U.S. - namely, derivative suits and securities class actions – and their equivalent in the Italian law system, achieve their principal regulatory goal of deterring corporate directors and officers from engaging in unlawful conduct, in addition to compensating shareholders and investors for the harm they suffered.

In the U.S., effective derivative suits and securities class actions, contingency fees, and the rule concerning legal expenses, create an entrepreneurial system in which directors and officers are ultimately deterred by the private enforcement of the law. Nevertheless, the presence of …


Strategic Management And The Role Of Legal Norms In Creating Corporate Value, Nadelle Grossman Aug 2011

Strategic Management And The Role Of Legal Norms In Creating Corporate Value, Nadelle Grossman

Nadelle Grossman

Delaware corporate law currently requires that directors oversee their firm’s systems to monitor risk so that they can limit their firm’s losses from such risks. Corporate law does not, however, require either directors or officers to oversee the interrelated process of managing that firm’s strategy for gains. Yet managing both risk and strategy are essential to a firm in creating value. In fact, as I argue in the paper, the current focus by business courts and academic commentators only on risk management oversight to prevent losses could actually undermine a firm’s management of its strategy for gains. I therefore propose …


“The End Of The Beginning?” A Comprehensive Look At The U.N.’S Business And Human Rights Agenda From A Bystander Perspective, Jena Martin Amerson Aug 2011

“The End Of The Beginning?” A Comprehensive Look At The U.N.’S Business And Human Rights Agenda From A Bystander Perspective, Jena Martin Amerson

Jena Martin Amerson

Abstract With the endorsement of Special Representative John Ruggie’s Guiding Principles regarding the issue of business and human rights, an important chapter of this subject has come to a close. Beginning with the then U.N. Secretary General’s “global compact” speech in 1999, the international legal framework for business and human rights has undergone tremendous change and progress. Yet, for all these developments, there has been no exhaustive examination in the legal academy of all of these events; certainly there is no one piece that discusses or analyzes all the major instruments that have been proposed and endorsed by the U.N. …


"Systemic Poverty As A Cause Of Recessions", Robert Ashford Aug 2011

"Systemic Poverty As A Cause Of Recessions", Robert Ashford

Robert Ashford

This article argues that the failure to address and ameliorate systemic poverty is a major cause of recessions. Recessions occur (and sub-optimal employment and growth persist) when a critical mass of market participants come to believe that the distribution of future earning capacity is not sufficient to purchase what can be produced despite the physical and technological capacity to employ available labor and capital to produce more over the same period even at lower unit cost. The essence of systemic poverty is widespread inadequate earning capacity. In recessionary periods, with rising unemployment, the problem of inadequate earning capacity (which perennially …


The Availability Of Takeover Defenses And Deal Protection Devices For Anglo-American Target Companies, Albert "Chip" Saulsbury Iv Aug 2011

The Availability Of Takeover Defenses And Deal Protection Devices For Anglo-American Target Companies, Albert "Chip" Saulsbury Iv

Albert "Chip" Saulsbury IV

On July 21, 2011 the U.K.’s Panel on Takeovers and Mergers (the “Panel”) released amendments to the City Code on Takeovers and Mergers (the “Takeover Code”). These amendments, which take effect on September 19, 2011, will have a significant impact on the manner in which companies in the U.K. engage in mergers and acquisitions (“M&A”) and will amplify the differences between British and American deal activity. Because of these amendments to the Takeover Code within the last month, the following Article, The Availability of Takeover Defenses and Deal Protection Devices for Anglo-American Target Companies, is especially timely and will provide …


Voice Without Say: Why More Capitalist Firms Are Not (Genuinely) Participatory, Justin Schwartz Aug 2011

Voice Without Say: Why More Capitalist Firms Are Not (Genuinely) Participatory, Justin Schwartz

Justin Schwartz

Why are most capitalist enterprises of any size organized as authoritarian bureaucracies rather than incorporating genuinely employee participation that would give the workers real authority? Even firms with employee participation programs leave virtually all decision making power in the hands of management. The standard answer is that hierarchy is more economically efficient than any sort of genuine participation, so that participatory firms would be less productive or efficient and lose out to more traditional competitors. This answer is indefensible. After surveying the history, legal status, and varieties of employee participation, I examine and reject as question-begging the argument that the …


Towards A Nexus Of Virtue, Ronald J. Colombo Aug 2011

Towards A Nexus Of Virtue, Ronald J. Colombo

Ronald J Colombo

Corporate law, like all law, should be directed toward the common good. The common good requires that corporate activity be restrained, if not actively directed, by human virtue. An analysis of the corporate enterprise suggests that those corporate actors with the greatest stake in the exercise of virtue, and best positioned to influence corporate activity via the exercise of virtuous judgment, are the corporation’s officers. Thus, one of the primary objectives of corporate law should be the promotion of virtue among corporate officers.

Contrary to what some might assume, the promotion of virtue among corporate officers need not entail a …


A Pattern Of Unaccountability: Rating Agency Liability, The Dodd-Frank Act, And A Financial Crisis That Could Have Been Prevented, Stephen P. Alicanti Aug 2011

A Pattern Of Unaccountability: Rating Agency Liability, The Dodd-Frank Act, And A Financial Crisis That Could Have Been Prevented, Stephen P. Alicanti

Stephen P Alicanti

By opining on the credit quality of structured debt products, credit rating agencies guide investment decisions and facilitate the debt capital markets. In the years leading up to the financial crisis of 2007, loans were commonly issued to individuals with poor credit histories and insufficient income. After those loans were originated, investment banks packaged them into securitized debt products and sold sections (tranches) to investors. Many of those products received credit rating agencies’ highest endorsement of creditworthiness. Despite their high ratings, those products failed during the financial crisis and devastated individual investors, investment banks, and insurance companies. The financial shockwaves …


A Pattern Of Unaccountability: Rating Agency Liability, The Dodd-Frank Act, And A Financial Crisis That Could Have Been Prevented, Stephen P. Alicanti Aug 2011

A Pattern Of Unaccountability: Rating Agency Liability, The Dodd-Frank Act, And A Financial Crisis That Could Have Been Prevented, Stephen P. Alicanti

Stephen P Alicanti

By opining on the credit quality of structured debt products, credit rating agencies guide investment decisions and facilitate the debt capital markets. In the years leading up to the financial crisis of 2007, loans were commonly issued to individuals with poor credit histories and insufficient income. After those loans were originated, investment banks packaged them into securitized debt products and sold sections (tranches) to investors. Many of those products received credit rating agencies’ highest endorsement of creditworthiness. Despite their high ratings, those products failed during the financial crisis and devastated individual investors, investment banks, and insurance companies. The financial shockwaves …


Where Did Mill Go Wrong?: Why The Capital Managed Firm Rather Than The Labor Managed Enterprise Is The Predominant Organizational Form In Market Economies, Justin Schwartz Jul 2011

Where Did Mill Go Wrong?: Why The Capital Managed Firm Rather Than The Labor Managed Enterprise Is The Predominant Organizational Form In Market Economies, Justin Schwartz

Justin Schwartz

In this Article, I propose a novel law and economics explanation of a deeply puzzling aspect of business organization in market economies. Why are virtually all firms are organized as capital managed and owned (capitalist) enterprises rather than as labor managed and owned cooperatives? Over 150 years ago, J.S. Mill predicted that efficiency and other advantages would eventually make worker cooperatives predominant over capitalist firms. Mill was right about the advantages but wrong about the results. The standard explanation is that capitalist enterprise is more efficient. Empirical research, however, overwhelmingly contradicts this. But employees almost never even attempt to organize …


Demystifying The Determination Of Foreign Law In U.S. Courts: Opening The Door To A Greater Global Understanding, Matthew J. Wilson Jun 2011

Demystifying The Determination Of Foreign Law In U.S. Courts: Opening The Door To A Greater Global Understanding, Matthew J. Wilson

Matthew J. Wilson

With globalization and the proliferation of international commercial interaction, U.S. courts commonly encounter issues governed by the laws of other sovereigns. These encounters arise by virtue of private agreements or choice-of-law rules covering contractual relationships, cross-border conduct, tortuous acts, employment matters, intellectual property rights, and various other legal foundations. Because the substantive law applied in an international lawsuit can be outcome-determinative, it is important to accurately ascertain and determine the relevant law. In fact, the proper functioning of private international law in a domestic system is based on the appropriate application of law.

U.S. federal and state courts are presumed …


Let Charities Speak: 501(C)(3) Charitable Organizations After Citizens United, Paul D. Weitzel May 2011

Let Charities Speak: 501(C)(3) Charitable Organizations After Citizens United, Paul D. Weitzel

Paul D. Weitzel

This paper argues that tax deductible charities have a constitutional right to speak about politics. 501(c)(3) organizations include all tax deductible charities, including religious groups. Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission abrogated the ban on political speech by 501(c)(3) organizations by rejecting the reasoning in Regan v. Taxation with Representation of Washington. Regan found that 501(c)(3) organizations could be prohibited from speaking because they would still be able to speak through affiliate organizations. Citizens United rejected this argument when applied to for-profit corporations, and that reasoning applies equally to non-profit organizations. Citizens United also rejected the distinction between subsidies and …


Women On Corporate Boards Of Directors - A Global Snapshot, Douglas M. Branson May 2011

Women On Corporate Boards Of Directors - A Global Snapshot, Douglas M. Branson

douglas m branson

This paper builds on earlier books by the author (No Seat at the Table - How Governance and Law Keep Women Out of the Boardroom (2007) and The Last Male Bastion - Gender and the CEO Suite at America's Public Companies (2010)). The article identifies, describes, and critiques six movements or programs from various parts of the globe, all intended and designed to place additonal women directors on corporate baords of directors and in senior corporate management.


“No Fishing Poles Allowed At The Office,” And Other Suggestions On How To Limit “Fishing Expeditions” To An Outdoor Weekend Activity And Away From The Realm Of E-Discovery, Joanna K. Slusarz Apr 2011

“No Fishing Poles Allowed At The Office,” And Other Suggestions On How To Limit “Fishing Expeditions” To An Outdoor Weekend Activity And Away From The Realm Of E-Discovery, Joanna K. Slusarz

Joanna Slusarz

Early settlement is usually encouraged by the courts and welcomed by most parties involved in a lawsuit. However, it may not always be the most favorable result. This idiosyncrasy arises most when the costs of continuing litigation and adjudication on the merits outweigh those of early settlement. On the other hand, early settlement raises the risk of “encourag[ing] additional, low merit cases that might not otherwise have been filed had the company chosen to litigate existing lawsuits.”

The phenomenon of electronic discovery (“e-discovery”) has exponentially increased the occurrence of the latter result. As a result, defendants, particularly large corporations with …


Legal Political Moral Hazard: Does The Dodd-Frank Act End Too Big To Fail?, Troy S. Brown Apr 2011

Legal Political Moral Hazard: Does The Dodd-Frank Act End Too Big To Fail?, Troy S. Brown

Troy S Brown

Abstract In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, Senator Chris Dodd proposed the Restoring American Financial Stability Act of 2010 (the “Dodd-Frank Act”). The Dodd-Frank Act, the result of more than 18 months of negotiation and debate, aims to strengthen consumer protection, and regulate complex financial products. President Obama called the Dodd-Frank Act “the greatest overhaul of Wall Street since the Great Depression.” Among the many changes and hopes for the Dodd-Frank Act is that it will finally end the financial calamity, social unrest, and massive federal bailouts associated with the “too big to fail” concept. The “too big …


The Global Shadow Bank--Systemic Risk And Tax Policy Objectives: The Uncertain Case Of Foreign Hedge Fund Lending In The United States, Julie A.D. Manasfi Mar 2011

The Global Shadow Bank--Systemic Risk And Tax Policy Objectives: The Uncertain Case Of Foreign Hedge Fund Lending In The United States, Julie A.D. Manasfi

Julie A.D. Manasfi

ABSTRACT: THE GLOBAL SHADOW BANK-- SYSTEMIC RISK AND TAX POLICY OBJECTIVES: THE UNCERTAIN CASE OF FOREIGN HEDGE FUND LENDING IN THE UNITED STATES With the recent financial crisis in the U.S. starting in 2007, much attention has been drawn to the issue of whether and to what extent financial regulation should keep pace with financial innovation and the shadow banking system. However, often ignored is the Internal Revenue Code’s failure to adequately keep pace with this financial innovation. One example of how the tax laws lag behind financial innovation can be found in the taxation of lending into the U.S. …


Abdullahi: A Lost Opportunity To Clarify Alien Tort Statute Jurisprudence For Corporations, Benjamin P. Harbuck Mar 2011

Abdullahi: A Lost Opportunity To Clarify Alien Tort Statute Jurisprudence For Corporations, Benjamin P. Harbuck

Benjamin P Harbuck

The Supreme Court recently denied certiorari from the Second Circuit’s Abdullahi v. Pfizer, Inc, an Alien Tort Statute (ATS) case concerning Pfizer’s nonconsensual medical testing of the antibiotic Trovan after a meningitis epidemic in Nigeria. The seminal Supreme Court ATS case of Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, with its oft-quoted “vigilant doorkeeping” requirement, provided the basis for many of the arguments in Abdullahi. Yet the Second Circuit failed to act as a vigilant doorkeeper, extending ATS jurisdiction to situations that should not be considered to rise to the standard required by Sosa. This paper therefore advocates that the Supreme Court accept an …


The Irony Of International Business Law: U.S. Progressivism, China's New Laissez Faire, And Their Impact In The Developing World, Andrew Brady Spalding Mar 2011

The Irony Of International Business Law: U.S. Progressivism, China's New Laissez Faire, And Their Impact In The Developing World, Andrew Brady Spalding

Andrew Brady Spalding

As the financial crisis draws U.S. business overseas and developing countries rise in influence, the regulation of international business has never figured so prominently in federal law. But the dominant paradigm through which academics and policymakers continue to view that law – the so-called “Washington Consensus” – proves deeply misleading. A more accurate account of the components, origins, and aims of U.S. international business law reveals two striking ironies.

First, in discrete but critical ways, the U.S. no longer represents the comparatively laissez-faire approach to federal business regulation. Rather, owing to its origins in the Progressive Era, U.S. federal law …


Beyond The Board Of Directors, Kelli A. Alces Mar 2011

Beyond The Board Of Directors, Kelli A. Alces

Kelli A. Alces

The law of corporate governance places the board of directors at the top of the corporate decisionmaking structure. So, accountability for corporate decisions rests primarily on the shoulders of part-time employees who lack the time and thorough knowledge of the firm necessary to perform the board’s duties effectively. Corporate governance scholarship is similarly preoccupied with the board of directors. Scholars have debated whether to enhance or diminish the board’s authority within the firm, but all accept that a board of directors should preside over corporate decisionmaking. This Article argues that scholars on both sides of the debate have missed the …