In several recent decisions the federal appeals courts have adopted a standard for reviewing denials of proposed bank combinations which substantially restricts the ability of federal bank regulators to reject anticompetitive combinations. Professor Carstensen analyzes the three leading decisions and the litigating positions of the parties. He argues that the results in these cases, although predictable, are inconsistent with express statutory language, legislative history, past Supreme Court construction of the relevant standard, and the fundamental public policy of avoiding unnecessarily anticompetitive combinations. He suggests two ways in which the statute could be read which would preserve reasonable judicial review of agency decisions...
The ability of businesses to shift regulatory jurisdictions has long raised questions about whether ...
Conflicting criteria put forth by Congress and the Justice Department have caused confusion among th...
Includes bibliographical references (p. ).For more than one hundred years, American antitrust laws h...
In several recent decisions the federal appeals courts have adopted a standard for reviewing denials...
In Philadelphia National Bank (PNB), the Supreme Court held that it is improper to weigh a merger\u2...
T he organization of bank regulation in the United States is somewhatpeculiar. Banks answer to an ar...
Congressional and judicial attitudes towards the banking industry have reflected two, sometimes conf...
This article finds that the financial regulatory agencies operate in an environment where regulatory...
The first chapter examines the impact of bank regulatory enforcement actions on the competitive stru...
This article examines the potential for the application of competition law in the banking sector to ...
A contemporary consensus in antitrust discourse inappropriately places exclusionary conduct at the p...
Over the past several years readers of this Revieul have been exposed to a number of articles dealin...
Our article considers whether the existence of a global banking market has resulted in the convergen...
Banks and credit unions sometimes complain that the examination process regulators use to police ban...
Over the past several years, antitrust laws' significance as a public policy to promote competition ...
The ability of businesses to shift regulatory jurisdictions has long raised questions about whether ...
Conflicting criteria put forth by Congress and the Justice Department have caused confusion among th...
Includes bibliographical references (p. ).For more than one hundred years, American antitrust laws h...
In several recent decisions the federal appeals courts have adopted a standard for reviewing denials...
In Philadelphia National Bank (PNB), the Supreme Court held that it is improper to weigh a merger\u2...
T he organization of bank regulation in the United States is somewhatpeculiar. Banks answer to an ar...
Congressional and judicial attitudes towards the banking industry have reflected two, sometimes conf...
This article finds that the financial regulatory agencies operate in an environment where regulatory...
The first chapter examines the impact of bank regulatory enforcement actions on the competitive stru...
This article examines the potential for the application of competition law in the banking sector to ...
A contemporary consensus in antitrust discourse inappropriately places exclusionary conduct at the p...
Over the past several years readers of this Revieul have been exposed to a number of articles dealin...
Our article considers whether the existence of a global banking market has resulted in the convergen...
Banks and credit unions sometimes complain that the examination process regulators use to police ban...
Over the past several years, antitrust laws' significance as a public policy to promote competition ...
The ability of businesses to shift regulatory jurisdictions has long raised questions about whether ...
Conflicting criteria put forth by Congress and the Justice Department have caused confusion among th...
Includes bibliographical references (p. ).For more than one hundred years, American antitrust laws h...