Modern securities regulation has three main areas, each of which is plagued by a core problem. Mandatory disclosure law leaves society with suboptimal disclosure, as the government calls for too little of some information (for example, management analysis of company prospects) and too much of other information (for example, data about trivial executive perks). Securities fraud law (specifically, its central fraud-on-the-market theory of reliance) yields damages at odds with any reasonable theory of compensation and deterrence. And insider trading law fails to achieve its ends because incentives to police illegal trading and tipping by executives are currently weak. In this Article, we propose fixing these fundamental flaws of securities law...
Until recently, most startups that grew to become valuable businesses chose to become public compani...
Under the dominant account, securities fraud by public firms harms the firms’ shareholders and, more...
Article by Kimberly Anne Summe (Investment Banking Legal Division, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, New Y...
Modern securities regulation has three main areas, each of which is plagued by a core problem. Manda...
This Article posits that the essential role of securities regulation is to create a competitive mark...
This article analyzes and critiques the federal securities laws\u27 reliance on disclosure as the pr...
It has long been said that market forces alone will result in a problematic under-sharing of informa...
Fraud in the securities markets has been a focus of legislative reform in recent years. Corporations...
In 1988, in response to rampant insider trading during the 1980s, Congress passed the Insider Tradin...
Over the last few decades world securities markets have become significantly more sophisticated in t...
This Article addresses a problem at the intersection of securities regulation and government ethics:...
As barriers to international investment fall and technology improves, the cost advantages for a firm...
The institutional design literature is interested in the optimality of particular legal institutions...
Rule 10b-5’s antifraud catch-all is one of the most consequential pieces of American administrative ...
Insider trading is the most common form of securities fraud. Today it remains as confrontational as ...
Until recently, most startups that grew to become valuable businesses chose to become public compani...
Under the dominant account, securities fraud by public firms harms the firms’ shareholders and, more...
Article by Kimberly Anne Summe (Investment Banking Legal Division, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, New Y...
Modern securities regulation has three main areas, each of which is plagued by a core problem. Manda...
This Article posits that the essential role of securities regulation is to create a competitive mark...
This article analyzes and critiques the federal securities laws\u27 reliance on disclosure as the pr...
It has long been said that market forces alone will result in a problematic under-sharing of informa...
Fraud in the securities markets has been a focus of legislative reform in recent years. Corporations...
In 1988, in response to rampant insider trading during the 1980s, Congress passed the Insider Tradin...
Over the last few decades world securities markets have become significantly more sophisticated in t...
This Article addresses a problem at the intersection of securities regulation and government ethics:...
As barriers to international investment fall and technology improves, the cost advantages for a firm...
The institutional design literature is interested in the optimality of particular legal institutions...
Rule 10b-5’s antifraud catch-all is one of the most consequential pieces of American administrative ...
Insider trading is the most common form of securities fraud. Today it remains as confrontational as ...
Until recently, most startups that grew to become valuable businesses chose to become public compani...
Under the dominant account, securities fraud by public firms harms the firms’ shareholders and, more...
Article by Kimberly Anne Summe (Investment Banking Legal Division, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, New Y...