After having forbidden companies to provide financial forecasts until 1973, the SEC now encourages them to do so because of the relevance of prognosis for investors. As forecasts are inherently uncertain, there is always the risk for the companies to be suit when predictions fail. Therefore the US courts have developed safe harbors, like the bespeaks caution doctrine or corporate puffery defense which are discussed in this paper along with the fraud on the market doctrine. The jurisdiction about this topic is presented and criticized by economic and behavioral economic arguments. In the conclusion the conflict between warranting the safe harbor mainly for immaterial information while having the goal of providing relevant information to inve...
This paper discusses the ability of models on cheap talk, and of audit and liability regulations, to...
‘Safe harbour’ is shorthand for a bundle of privileges in insolvency which are typically afforded to...
The research question of this study is whether or not companies can improve the relationship with th...
Optimism is an indispensable element of effective salesmanship. It is therefore quite natural for th...
In our present economy and computerized society, investors and creditors would like as firm an analy...
Disclosure of estimates and opinions, which are often referred to as ‘soft information,‘ has present...
Developed capital markets require companies to publish all material information. But securities regu...
This Article critically analyzes the judicial decisions and reasoning of the United States Supreme C...
This paper analyses the legality of private prediction markets under U.S. law, describing both the l...
Many securities fraud lawsuits follow corporate disasters of some sort or another, claiming that kno...
Voluntary public disclosure of soft information—corporate projections and predictions and other forw...
The judicial view of a “reasonable investor” plays an important role in federal securities regulatio...
This Article addresses insolvency law-related issues in connection with certain financial-markets co...
The privileged information that the owners have on their firms may discourage rational financial inv...
We present a model that helps explain several past collapses of securitization markets. Originators ...
This paper discusses the ability of models on cheap talk, and of audit and liability regulations, to...
‘Safe harbour’ is shorthand for a bundle of privileges in insolvency which are typically afforded to...
The research question of this study is whether or not companies can improve the relationship with th...
Optimism is an indispensable element of effective salesmanship. It is therefore quite natural for th...
In our present economy and computerized society, investors and creditors would like as firm an analy...
Disclosure of estimates and opinions, which are often referred to as ‘soft information,‘ has present...
Developed capital markets require companies to publish all material information. But securities regu...
This Article critically analyzes the judicial decisions and reasoning of the United States Supreme C...
This paper analyses the legality of private prediction markets under U.S. law, describing both the l...
Many securities fraud lawsuits follow corporate disasters of some sort or another, claiming that kno...
Voluntary public disclosure of soft information—corporate projections and predictions and other forw...
The judicial view of a “reasonable investor” plays an important role in federal securities regulatio...
This Article addresses insolvency law-related issues in connection with certain financial-markets co...
The privileged information that the owners have on their firms may discourage rational financial inv...
We present a model that helps explain several past collapses of securitization markets. Originators ...
This paper discusses the ability of models on cheap talk, and of audit and liability regulations, to...
‘Safe harbour’ is shorthand for a bundle of privileges in insolvency which are typically afforded to...
The research question of this study is whether or not companies can improve the relationship with th...