This paper studies the effect of campaign contributions to lead plaintiffs — “pay to play’’ — on the level of attorneys’ fees in securities class actions. We find that state pension funds generally pay lower attorneys’ fees when they serve as lead plaintiffs in securities class actions than do individual investors serving in that capacity. This differential disappears, however, when we control for campaign contributions made to officials with influence over state pension funds. Thus, pay to play appears to increase agency costs borne by shareholders in securities class actions
Regulatory competition has long driven the path of corporate law in the federal system of the United...
Book review of he Other Rights Revolution: Conservative Lawyers and the Remaking of American Governm...
At a time of economic dislocation in the legal profession, it is likely that bar regulators will tur...
Using a sample of securities fraud class actions filed between 2003 and 2007, we study the impact of...
Historically, securities law has not been a high priority for the Supreme Court. The first five year...
This Essay explores the seminal role played by SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur in establishing Rule 10b-5’...
The work of Ronald Coase is notable for two primary reasons. First, it introduced the notion of tran...
In large Chapter 11 cases, the prototypical creditor is no longer a small player holding a claim muc...
What would the criminal law look like if we took retributivist principles very seriously? In their b...
The increase in institutional ownership of recent decades has been accompanied by an enhanced role p...
We study the SEC’s allocation of enforcement resources in the wake of a salient public scandal. We f...
In 1992, Chairman Rostenkowski introduced legislation that imposed US capital gains tax on foreign s...
This essay analyzes the tax treatment of carried interests in private equity. It argues that there a...
This Essay (part of the panel on The Administrative State and the Constitution at the 2009 Federal...
This chapter, written for the Research Handbook on Shareholder Litigation, surveys empirical work st...
Regulatory competition has long driven the path of corporate law in the federal system of the United...
Book review of he Other Rights Revolution: Conservative Lawyers and the Remaking of American Governm...
At a time of economic dislocation in the legal profession, it is likely that bar regulators will tur...
Using a sample of securities fraud class actions filed between 2003 and 2007, we study the impact of...
Historically, securities law has not been a high priority for the Supreme Court. The first five year...
This Essay explores the seminal role played by SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur in establishing Rule 10b-5’...
The work of Ronald Coase is notable for two primary reasons. First, it introduced the notion of tran...
In large Chapter 11 cases, the prototypical creditor is no longer a small player holding a claim muc...
What would the criminal law look like if we took retributivist principles very seriously? In their b...
The increase in institutional ownership of recent decades has been accompanied by an enhanced role p...
We study the SEC’s allocation of enforcement resources in the wake of a salient public scandal. We f...
In 1992, Chairman Rostenkowski introduced legislation that imposed US capital gains tax on foreign s...
This essay analyzes the tax treatment of carried interests in private equity. It argues that there a...
This Essay (part of the panel on The Administrative State and the Constitution at the 2009 Federal...
This chapter, written for the Research Handbook on Shareholder Litigation, surveys empirical work st...
Regulatory competition has long driven the path of corporate law in the federal system of the United...
Book review of he Other Rights Revolution: Conservative Lawyers and the Remaking of American Governm...
At a time of economic dislocation in the legal profession, it is likely that bar regulators will tur...