Corporate law theory and practice considers shareholder relations with companies and the implications of ownership separated from control. Yet through the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) bailout and the government\u27s resultant shareholding, ownership and control at many companies have merged, leaving corporate theory and practice for the financial and automotive sectors in chaos. The government\u27s $700 billion bailout is a unique historical event; not merely because of its size, but also because of a resulting ripple through corporate scholarship and practice. This Article builds on the Author\u27s five testimonies before Congress during the financial crisis and implementation of the TARP bailout and his consultation for the Specia...
To discourage firms from buying and selling tax deductions, Section 382 of the tax code limits the a...
Shareholders can utilize internal and external governance mechanisms to minimize agency costs. Inter...
After more than eighty years of sustained attention, the master problem of U.S. corporate law—the se...
(Excerpt) This Article explores these questions and more with respect to the current role the govern...
Despite the likelihood of future bailouts, the government articulated a consistent policy to deal wi...
Unaddressed by Congress or the Treasury is the potential for the Treasury to rely on material, nonpu...
As a result of the 2008 bailouts, the United States Government is now the controlling shareholder in...
Testimony issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The recent fi...
While the federal bailouts and stimulus packages are credited with saving the economy from systemati...
Treasury shares are an anomaly, since it has thus far appeared that they have been subjected to a do...
This Article is written as two discrete, independently accessible topical sections. The first topica...
During the Financial Crisis of 2007–2008, the Treasury injected an enormous amount of capital and he...
The shareholder empowerment provisions enacted as part of the recent bailout legislation are interna...
The times they are a changin\u27. Vanguard firms of the 1980s takeover boom have announced associate...
Orthodox corporate law and economics holds that American corporate and securities regulation has evo...
To discourage firms from buying and selling tax deductions, Section 382 of the tax code limits the a...
Shareholders can utilize internal and external governance mechanisms to minimize agency costs. Inter...
After more than eighty years of sustained attention, the master problem of U.S. corporate law—the se...
(Excerpt) This Article explores these questions and more with respect to the current role the govern...
Despite the likelihood of future bailouts, the government articulated a consistent policy to deal wi...
Unaddressed by Congress or the Treasury is the potential for the Treasury to rely on material, nonpu...
As a result of the 2008 bailouts, the United States Government is now the controlling shareholder in...
Testimony issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The recent fi...
While the federal bailouts and stimulus packages are credited with saving the economy from systemati...
Treasury shares are an anomaly, since it has thus far appeared that they have been subjected to a do...
This Article is written as two discrete, independently accessible topical sections. The first topica...
During the Financial Crisis of 2007–2008, the Treasury injected an enormous amount of capital and he...
The shareholder empowerment provisions enacted as part of the recent bailout legislation are interna...
The times they are a changin\u27. Vanguard firms of the 1980s takeover boom have announced associate...
Orthodox corporate law and economics holds that American corporate and securities regulation has evo...
To discourage firms from buying and selling tax deductions, Section 382 of the tax code limits the a...
Shareholders can utilize internal and external governance mechanisms to minimize agency costs. Inter...
After more than eighty years of sustained attention, the master problem of U.S. corporate law—the se...