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Articles 1 - 30 of 83
Full-Text Articles in Law
Assessing The Applicability Of The Business Judgment Rule And The “Defensive” Business Judgment Rule In The Chinese Judiciary: A Perspective On Takeover Dispute Adjudication, Xiao-Chuan Charlie Weng
Assessing The Applicability Of The Business Judgment Rule And The “Defensive” Business Judgment Rule In The Chinese Judiciary: A Perspective On Takeover Dispute Adjudication, Xiao-Chuan Charlie Weng
Xiao-chuan Charlie Weng
With the surge of takeovers in China, many issues regarding takeover adjudication and legislation have increasingly received academic attention. The issues of the independence and professionalization of the judiciary and the scarcity of legislation on duty of care are the major predicaments facing corporate China. Massive legislative and judicial reform of takeover adjudication is not viable in the near future. However, U.S. common law standards of review, including the business judgment rule and serial rules against hostile takeover, with diacritical the business judgment rule stamp, may hold potential for reform within the current economic environment. The article investigates the problems …
Path Dependence And Durability Of Hong Kong's Existing Corporate Reorganization System, Charles Zhen Qu Dr
Path Dependence And Durability Of Hong Kong's Existing Corporate Reorganization System, Charles Zhen Qu Dr
Charles Zhen Qu Dr
A corporate reorganization system that ensures optimal deployment of distressed companies’ assets helps promote economic development. In many developed economies, faltering firms are reorganized through a formal corporate reorganization procedure. The Hong Kong government has recently recommended the enactment of such a procedure on the assumption that the existing corporate and insolvency framework is ill-equipped to restructure failing companies. This article rebuts this assumption through an assessment of the efficiency of the judicially-developed reorganization system that has emerged as a result of the failure to introduce a formal reorganization procedure a decade ago. It argues that since an efficient alternative …
Directors In The Dock: An Analysis In The Light Of Maksud Sayid Case, Jitendra Soni
Directors In The Dock: An Analysis In The Light Of Maksud Sayid Case, Jitendra Soni
Jitendra Soni
No abstract provided.
On The Formation Of The American Corporate State: The Fuller Supreme Court, 1888-1910, George Skouras
On The Formation Of The American Corporate State: The Fuller Supreme Court, 1888-1910, George Skouras
George Skouras
This paper deals with the formation and legitimation of the American Corporate State by the Fuller Supreme Court. It argues that the Fuller Court was wrong to use the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment and natural law to support laissez-faire capitalism and the emergent corporate structure at the expense of labor and labor unions. It also argues that the corporatization of America has created a social and cultural environment that places business as the center of the American universe. This has led to a very asymmetrical relationship between corporations and citizens. It further argues that recent revisionist scholarship …
Executive Compensation: The Law And Incentives, Stas Getmanenko
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 …
Is The Public Utility Holding Company Act A Model For Breaking Up The Banks That Are Too-Big-To-Fail?, Roberta S. Karmel
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 …
Assuring Responsible Risk Management In Banking: The Corporate Governance Dimension, Michael E. Murphy
Assuring Responsible Risk Management In Banking: The Corporate Governance Dimension, Michael E. Murphy
Michael E Murphy
ABSTRACT The corporate governance dimension of risk management in banking concerns the structures needed to assure the power and independence of control centers. Three are clearly relevant: the risk management departments themselves, the audit function and particularly internal audit, and the contingent of independent directors on the board. A fourth, the shareholder base, is problematic. A survey of corporate governance disclosures reveals a need for more progress in assuring the independence of the risk management and internal audit functions by linking them more closely to the board. The board’s own capacity to function as an independent control center relates most …
A Japanese Calpers Or A New Model For Institutional Investor Activism? Japan's Pension Fund Association And The Emergence Of Shareholder Activism In Japan, Bruce Aronson
Bruce Aronson
If activist institutional investors are arguably the primary external monitors of management under leading corporate governance systems in the United States and the United Kingdom, who might assume that role in other countries? And, more importantly, what activist shareholder strategies may be possible under different corporate governance systems and operating environments that are generally less supportive of shareholder activism than the United States and the United Kingdom? This Article seeks to address that question through a comparison of the well-known strategy of CalPERS with that of a rare, real-world example of institutional investor activism outside of the “Anglo-Saxon” model—Japan’s Pension …
The U.B.S. Case: The U.S. Attack On Swiss Banking Sovereignty, Beckett G. Cantley
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 …
Was Selden Right? The Expansion Of Closed Seas And Its Consequences, Scott Shackelford
Was Selden Right? The Expansion Of Closed Seas And Its Consequences, Scott Shackelford
Scott Shackelford
This Article focuses on the relationship between the legal regimes governing offshore resources in the continental shelves and the deep seabed, particularly in reference to the extent to which continental shelf claims are encroaching on the deep seabed. The question of how well these respective legal regimes regulate resource exploitation will also be considered, along with an analysis of the underlying reasons driving change in these governance structures. I argue that the primary issue is one of whether vague rules, particularly UNCLOS Article 76, are working in terms of incentivizing sustainable, peaceful development of offshore resources.
Is Chapter 15 Universalist Or Territorialist? Empirical Evidence From United States Bankruptcy Court Cases, Jeremy Leong
Is Chapter 15 Universalist Or Territorialist? Empirical Evidence From United States Bankruptcy Court Cases, Jeremy Leong
Jeremy Leong
No abstract provided.
The Financial Reform Act: Will It Succeed In Reversing The Causes Of The Subprime Crisis And Prevent Future Crises?, Charles W. Murdock
The Financial Reform Act: Will It Succeed In Reversing The Causes Of The Subprime Crisis And Prevent Future Crises?, Charles W. Murdock
Charles W. Murdock
Summary: The Financial Reform Act: Will It Succeed in Reversing the Causes of the Subprime Crisis and Prevent Future Crises? By: Professor Charles W. Murdock
The current financial crisis, which could have plunged the world into a financial abyss similar to the Great Depression, is far from resolved. The financial institutions, which this article asserts caused the crisis, have returned to profitability and have paid billions of dollars in bonuses, while ordinary Americans have borne the brunt of the meltdown, with formal unemployment hanging around the 10% mark. This has caused some to comment that profits have been privatized and …
Cost-Benefit Analysis Of The Business Judgment Rule: A Critique In Light Of The Financial Meltdown, Todd Aman
Cost-Benefit Analysis Of The Business Judgment Rule: A Critique In Light Of The Financial Meltdown, Todd Aman
Todd M Aman
In 2008, the United States – indeed the whole world – suffered a devastating financial meltdown. We know now that a significant cause of the meltdown was that, in the face of numerous red flags, the managers of several venerable financial firms decided to take tremendous risks in the subprime mortgage market, and the directors of these firms did little or nothing to stop them. However, despite their actions, these managers and directors face little or no risk of personal liability because they are shielded by the business judgment rule and other liability reducing mechanisms, such as director exculpation statutes. …
The Rise And Fall Of Managerial Adaptive Responses To Incentive Pay, Sharon Hannes
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
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 …
Insider Trading As Misfeasance: The Yielding Of The Fiduciary Requirement, Joanna B. Apolinsky
Insider Trading As Misfeasance: The Yielding Of The Fiduciary Requirement, Joanna B. Apolinsky
Joanna B Apolinsky
Mark Cuban is a billionaire entrepreneur and active investor. He has also made news of late as a defendant in an action brought against him by the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) for insider trading. The SEC alleged that Cuban violated §10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 when he sold his Mamma.com stock after the company’s CEO informed him of material, confidential information regarding a planned securities offering by Mamma.com. Prior to informing Cuban of the offering, Mamma.com’s CEO first secured Cuban’s assurance that he would keep the information confidential. Cuban agreed. And he ended the …
Controlling Creditor Opportunism, Jonathan C. Lipson
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
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 …
The Rise Of The Corporation, The Birth Of Public Relations, And The Foundations Of Modern Political Economy, Donald J. Smythe
The Rise Of The Corporation, The Birth Of Public Relations, And The Foundations Of Modern Political Economy, Donald J. Smythe
Donald J. Smythe
The rise of the modern corporation was an integral part the Second Industrial Revolution. This important economic and social transformation would not have occurred if business firms had been unwilling to make the large investments necessary to implement the new technologies that drove the industrial growth and development, and business firms would have been reluctant to make the investments without the shield of limited liability and the opportunity to spread their risks across diversified portfolios of corporate stocks. Nonetheless, the rise of the modern corporation created problems. The most successful corporations grew to unprecedented proportions, and the public’s concerns about …
Financial Market Regulation After The Crisis: The Case For Hedge Fund Regulation Via Basel Iii, Wulf A. Kaal Ph.D.
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, …
The Financial Reform Act: Will It Succeed In Reversing The Causes Of The Subprime Crisis And Prevent Future Crises?, Charles W. Murdock
The Financial Reform Act: Will It Succeed In Reversing The Causes Of The Subprime Crisis And Prevent Future Crises?, Charles W. Murdock
Charles W. Murdock
Summary: The Financial Reform Act: Will It Succeed in Reversing the Causes of the Subprime Crisis and Prevent Future Crises? By: Professor Charles W. Murdock
The current financial crisis, which could have plunged the world into a financial abyss similar to the Great Depression, is far from resolved. The financial institutions, which this article asserts caused the crisis, have returned to profitability and have paid billions of dollars in bonuses, while ordinary Americans have borne the brunt of the meltdown, with formal unemployment hanging around the 10% mark. This has caused some to comment that profits have been privatized and …
Berle’S Conception Of Shareholder Primacy: A Forgotten Perspective For Reconsideration During The Rise Of Finance, Fenner Stewart
Berle’S Conception Of Shareholder Primacy: A Forgotten Perspective For Reconsideration During The Rise Of Finance, Fenner Stewart
Fenner L. Stewart Jr.
Adolf A. Berle is celebrated as the grandfather of modern shareholder primacy, but this glosses over his opposition to how Henry Manne used his argument. If Berle were alive today, he would certainly reject this praise. This is not always appreciated in commentaries of his shareholder primacy argument. For this reason, this article offers a nuanced understanding of Berle’s argument, providing a clear observation point for examining the shift from his shareholder primacy argument to the one of today. From this point of observation, the reader can see distinctions within, and potentials for, the shareholder primacy argument and thus the …
Do Accounting Rules Matter? The Dangerous Allure Of Mark To Market, Todd Henderson
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 …
Defending Against Shareholder Proxy Access: Delaware's Future Reviewing Company Defenses In The Era Of Dodd-Frank, J.W. Verret
Defending Against Shareholder Proxy Access: Delaware's Future Reviewing Company Defenses In The Era Of Dodd-Frank, J.W. Verret
John W Verret
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 has ensured that a shareholder’s ability to place nominees to the board onto the corporate ballot, an objective long advocated by the institutional investor community, will soon be implemented by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Advocates of proxy access urge that it will help hold boards of directors accountable to their owners. Critics argue that it will give conflicted shareholders, like unions and state pensions, power they will use to facilitate their political objectives at the expense of ordinary shareholders. The shareholder primacy and director primacy theories of corporate …
Auditors' Multi-Layered Liability Regime, Paolo E. Giudici
Auditors' Multi-Layered Liability Regime, Paolo E. Giudici
Paolo E. Giudici
The proposals to limit auditor liability, principally aimed at protecting the Big-4 from the risk of a catastrophic exposure to damages, are grounded on the assumption that auditors are generally over-deterred. The 2008 EC Commission Recommendation on auditor liability relies heavily on this assumption and the economic rationale that underpins it, which is entirely focused on liability towards investors and the US narrative concerning securities class actions. However, the case is much more complex. Any discussion about auditor liability must investigate the following questions: who the auditor’s principals are; whether they are in a position to negotiate in order to …
Insider Trading And Ceo Pay, Todd Henderson
Insider Trading And Ceo Pay, Todd Henderson
Todd Henderson
This Paper presents evidence boards of directors “bargain” with executives about the profits they expect to make from trades in firm stock. The evidence suggests executives whose trading freedom is increased using Rule 10b5-1 trading plans experienced reductions in other forms of pay to offset the potential gains from trading. There are two benefits from trading—portfolio optimization and informed trading profits—and this Paper allows us to isolate them. The data show boards pay executives in a way that reflects the profits they are expected to earn from informed trades. The legal issues about paying using illegal profits are explored. As …
Legal Mechanization Of Corporate Social Responsibility Through Alien Tort Statute Litigation: A Response To Professor Branson With Some Supplemental Thoughts, Donald J. Kochan
Legal Mechanization Of Corporate Social Responsibility Through Alien Tort Statute Litigation: A Response To Professor Branson With Some Supplemental Thoughts, Donald J. Kochan
Donald J. Kochan
This Response argues that as Alein Tort Statute jurisprudence “matures” or becomes more sophisticated, the legitimate limits of the law regress. The further expansion within the corporate defendant pool – attempting to pin liability on parent, great grandparent corporations and up to the top – raises the stakes and complexity of ATS litigation. The corporate social responsibility discussion raises three principal issues about how a moral corporation lives its life: how a corporation chooses its self-interest versus the interests of others, when and how it should help others if control decisions may harm the shareholder owners, and how far the …
How The Global Crime Syndicates Fuel Planet Destruction, Global Alliance
How The Global Crime Syndicates Fuel Planet Destruction, Global Alliance
Global Alliance
since 1945 more environmental planet destruction has been fuelled and financed with ever more leveraged debt than in the previous 60 million years - it's applied terrorism against the global life support system under the protection racket of a corrupt law profession
Legislative Intervention In Corporate Governance Is Not A Necessary Response To Citizens United Vs. Federal Election Commission, Stephen A. Yoder
Legislative Intervention In Corporate Governance Is Not A Necessary Response To Citizens United Vs. Federal Election Commission, Stephen A. Yoder
Stephen A Yoder
This article addresses the corporate governance implications of the recent decision of the United States Supreme Court in Citizens United vs. Federal Election Commission. It first reviews the Supreme Court's decisions over the past 35 years in election law including Citizens United. The article then summarizes the legislative proposals that have been made in response to the decision. The article argues that such proposals are not necessary or proper so long as boards of directors will fulfill their fiduciary duty to oversee political expenditures for the benefit of all stakeholders, with a long-term perspective.
Interpreting The Supreme Court’S Treatment Of The Chrysler Bankruptcy And Its Impact On Future Business Reorganizations, Fred N. David
Interpreting The Supreme Court’S Treatment Of The Chrysler Bankruptcy And Its Impact On Future Business Reorganizations, Fred N. David
Fred David
On June 9, 2009, the Supreme Court terminated its stay of Chrysler’s sale of substantially all of the company’s assets to a new entity, dubbed “New Chrysler” with the backing of European automaker Fiat. The effect of that ruling was to permit the sale to close the next day and bring to an end a chaotic period that determined Chrysler’s future. However, critics of the sale to Fiat argued that the Supreme Court’s ruling would also have a detrimental effect on secured credit and undermined the creditor protections normally afforded by Chapter 11 going forward.
But the Supreme Court was …