This Article examines the regulatory goals of creating “fair, orderly, and efficient” securities markets in light of the recent issues involving trading in the shares of GameStop Corp. (GME) through the broker-dealer firm Robinhood Financial LLC. The GameStop/Robinhood saga casts significant doubt on the notion that the SEC is achieving its goal of maintaining fair, orderly, and efficient markets, and facilitating capital formation. Moreover, the saga provides further support for the view that market forces tend to make securities markets fairer, where fairness is defined as investors “getting what they pay for,” rather than as investors “beating the market” by earning abnormal returns. Further, market processes tend to make markets more ef...
This chapter was prepared for a conference exploring the desirability and structure of a new special...
To every thing there is a season. In the area of securities regulation in the United States, it is t...
This Article argues that existing regulation of mutual funds has serious shortcomings. In particular...
This Article posits that the essential role of securities regulations is to create a competitive mar...
Part I of this article describes how perceptions that market efficiency is an important regulatory o...
The U.S. securities laws have repeatedly been assailed as burdensome or ineffective. Reform efforts ...
The time is long past when either economist or lawyers, on the basis of their own singular disciplin...
Securities regulation can be justified on a number of grounds, but furthering the expansion of oppor...
This Note comments on how recent developments in securities regulation deal with today’s securities ...
Popular zero-commission stock trading apps like Robinhood innovate in user-experience design, featur...
The author discusses the need for and the desirability of governmental regulation of the securities ...
Securities class actions are on the chopping block-again. Traditional commentators continue to vie...
Securities regulation wears two hats. Its “upstream” side governs firms in connection with their obt...
In the last two decades, massive financial scandals have impaired the integrity of the financial mar...
The corporate governance scandals of 2003 have brought renewed focus on mandatory disclosure. One of...
This chapter was prepared for a conference exploring the desirability and structure of a new special...
To every thing there is a season. In the area of securities regulation in the United States, it is t...
This Article argues that existing regulation of mutual funds has serious shortcomings. In particular...
This Article posits that the essential role of securities regulations is to create a competitive mar...
Part I of this article describes how perceptions that market efficiency is an important regulatory o...
The U.S. securities laws have repeatedly been assailed as burdensome or ineffective. Reform efforts ...
The time is long past when either economist or lawyers, on the basis of their own singular disciplin...
Securities regulation can be justified on a number of grounds, but furthering the expansion of oppor...
This Note comments on how recent developments in securities regulation deal with today’s securities ...
Popular zero-commission stock trading apps like Robinhood innovate in user-experience design, featur...
The author discusses the need for and the desirability of governmental regulation of the securities ...
Securities class actions are on the chopping block-again. Traditional commentators continue to vie...
Securities regulation wears two hats. Its “upstream” side governs firms in connection with their obt...
In the last two decades, massive financial scandals have impaired the integrity of the financial mar...
The corporate governance scandals of 2003 have brought renewed focus on mandatory disclosure. One of...
This chapter was prepared for a conference exploring the desirability and structure of a new special...
To every thing there is a season. In the area of securities regulation in the United States, it is t...
This Article argues that existing regulation of mutual funds has serious shortcomings. In particular...