This essay examines what, if anything, differentiates Enron's questionable use of off-balance-sheet special purposes entities, or SPEs, from the trillions of dollars of supposedly "legitimate" securitization and other structured finance transactions that use SPEs. The inquiry is important because the absence of meaningful differences would call all these transactions into question, whereas the presence of meaningful differences may inform regulatory schemes by providing a basis to distinguish which structured finance transactions should be allowed. This Essay also introduces the dilemma that some structured finance transactions are so complex that disclosure to investors in the sponsoring company is necessarily imperfect, either oversimplif...
Prior to January of 2003, the accounting rules for off-balance sheet financing allowed corporations ...
The Article examines assumptions behind literature that uncritically assumes that securitization tra...
This paper assesses the efforts to “clean up” financial markets and corporate governance practices i...
This essay examines, what, if anything, differentiates Enron\u27s questionable use of off-balance-sh...
On the heels of Enron\u27s debacle came the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, the far reaching legislative...
In a prior article, Professor Schwarcz examined the factors that differentiate Enron\u27s questionab...
Three scandals have reshaped business regulation over the past thirty years: the securities fraud pr...
This Article addresses the implications that the Enron collapse holds out for the self-regulatory sy...
This essay argues that the Enron affair has been misunderstood as a failure of monitoring, with adve...
The Enron collapse has many facets. It is particularly rich in financial reporting and disclosure is...
Enron has been one of the biggest corporate failures in the history of the United States thereby aff...
Abstract The financial collapse of Enron Corporation in 2002 has shaken the public confidence in th...
Individual investment decisions are guided by the knowledge that is presented by financial experts a...
Analysis of the corporate governance crisis that manifested itself in the United States at the turn ...
Securities regulation wears two hats. Its “upstream” side governs firms in connection with their obt...
Prior to January of 2003, the accounting rules for off-balance sheet financing allowed corporations ...
The Article examines assumptions behind literature that uncritically assumes that securitization tra...
This paper assesses the efforts to “clean up” financial markets and corporate governance practices i...
This essay examines, what, if anything, differentiates Enron\u27s questionable use of off-balance-sh...
On the heels of Enron\u27s debacle came the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, the far reaching legislative...
In a prior article, Professor Schwarcz examined the factors that differentiate Enron\u27s questionab...
Three scandals have reshaped business regulation over the past thirty years: the securities fraud pr...
This Article addresses the implications that the Enron collapse holds out for the self-regulatory sy...
This essay argues that the Enron affair has been misunderstood as a failure of monitoring, with adve...
The Enron collapse has many facets. It is particularly rich in financial reporting and disclosure is...
Enron has been one of the biggest corporate failures in the history of the United States thereby aff...
Abstract The financial collapse of Enron Corporation in 2002 has shaken the public confidence in th...
Individual investment decisions are guided by the knowledge that is presented by financial experts a...
Analysis of the corporate governance crisis that manifested itself in the United States at the turn ...
Securities regulation wears two hats. Its “upstream” side governs firms in connection with their obt...
Prior to January of 2003, the accounting rules for off-balance sheet financing allowed corporations ...
The Article examines assumptions behind literature that uncritically assumes that securitization tra...
This paper assesses the efforts to “clean up” financial markets and corporate governance practices i...