502 research outputs found
Spraying Religion: (Anti-)Religious Graffiti of the Post-Socialist Transition
This article discusses graffiti and street art concerning religion, part of the author\u27s much broader and continuous research on contemporary political graffiti and street art in post-socialist Central and Eastern Europe, from the Baltics to the Balkans, from Prague to Moscow, comprising over 20 years of systematic fieldwork
Team Production and Securities Laws
In the seminal paper that this symposium celebrates, A Team Production Theory of Corporate Law, Margaret Blair and Lynn Stout made two related points. First, that Delaware law does not require shareholder primacy in public corporations. Rather, the broad deference afforded to the decisions of predominantly independent corporate boards of directors is consistent with a contrary theory, that of team production, or, as they call it, âthe mediating hierarchâ theory. The fundamental role of the board of directors is to mediate between the interests of various stakeholders that contribute to the corporationâs output. As a result, Delaware courts have repeatedly authorized board decisions that further the interests of stakeholders at the expense of shareholdersâ short-term interests, so long as directors are pursuing the long-term interests of the corporation. Second, Blair and Stout assert that such an arrangement is more efficient than narrow shareholder primacy. Board decisions are protected by the business judgment rule, which allows and enables the board, without risk of liability, to further the interests of stakeholders because that increases overall social welfare. Blair and Stoutâs positive and normative assessments that team production is a better fit with Delaware corporate law, and likely more efficient, are convincing. In my brief contribution, I draw on a closely related area of lawâsecurities regulationâto make two related points. First, unlike corporate law, securities regulation can be described as requiring shareholder primacy, or at least investor primacy. This is important because securities compliance takes up more of directorsâ and officersâ time than compliance with corporate law, and thus likely influences and informs their day-to-day decisionmaking to a greater degree than does corporate law. If so, perhaps the persistent dominance of shareholder primacy in corporate governance should not be surprising. Second, investor primacy in securities regulation and enforcement may produce efficient results for most securities activities, but produces suboptimal compliance and enforcement for the most heavily litigated and debated category of securities misconduct: accounting fraud. Empirical evidence on the economic consequences of fraudulent financial reporting suggests that the exclusive focus on shareholders is misplaced
Distortion Other Than Price Distortion
The fraud-on-the-market doctrine adopted in Basic Inc. v. Levinson (âBasicâ) allows the plaintiff suing under Rule 10b-5 to satisfy the reliance requirement by showing that the market in which the security was traded was efficient and that she purchased the security at the market price during the period of the misrepresentation. If she succeeds, the plaintiff is entitled to two presumptions: first, that the misrepresentation distorted the price of that security, and second, that she purchased the security in reliance on that misrepresentation.
In Halliburton Co. v. Erica P. John Fund, Inc. (âHalliburton IIâ), the Supreme Court considered a direct attack on Basicâs presumptions, and declined to do away with them. Judging by the volume of academic commentary to date, the most significant contribution of Halliburton II is a more pragmatic definition of market efficiency, which is the underlying mechanism that converts information about securities into their prices. To invoke the presumption of reliance in a fraud-on-the-market suit, plaintiffs no longer need to show that the market for a public company security is hyper-efficient, in that it fully and quickly impounds into stock prices all publicly available information, as some courts have required. Rather, the Court embraced the notion that market efficiency is a âmatter of degree.â
In this Article, I propose that much of Halliburton IIâs second holdingâthat a defendant can prevent class certification by showing no statistically significant movement in the price of the security at the time of corrective disclosureâdoes nothing to improve the quality of securities class-action litigation, and could make it worse. Financial misreporting by public companies distorts more than just the price of the firmsâ securities, and that distortion other than that affecting the prices of public securities can in some circumstances be more significant and economically wasteful than stock price distortion. This Article develops an analytical matrix that identifies possible combinations of distortions in the stock price and economic dislocation to suggest when fraud-on-the-market litigation is likely to insufficiently deter disclosure fraud. Based on empirical studies, this Article identifies the circumstances in which large economic distortions caused by false disclosures are likely to be particularly large. In light of these observations, the Article suggests that fraud-on-the-market litigation should not be understood primarily as a remedy for victimized shareholders, who can often eliminate the cost of fraud ex ante, but as a quasi qui tam cause of action available to purchasers and sellers of (usually equity) securities to police economically-harmful false disclosures by public companies. Even in cases where buyers and sellers of stock are not the class most significantly harmed by disclosure fraud, they nearly always suffer some identifiable losses, thus avoiding difficult evidentiary questions about standing. When viewed through this lens, many of the objections to securities litigation become moot and its virtues are revealed
Politics in Securities Enforcement
American securities enforcement agencies often face charges that they use their enforcement power to further political goals.\u27 Most recently, Standard & Poor\u27s credit rating agency claimed that the U.S. Department of Justice unfairly singled it out for prosecution for fraudulent credit ratings after it downgraded U.S. sovereign debt. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC or the Commission), too, has been accused of using its enforcement politically: of bringing enforcement actions to improve its political standing, to punish its detractors, or to deflect attention from negative reports about its activities; and of holding back investigations of politically-connected figures
Contested Anniversary â Celebrating November 29, Republic Day (of Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia) in Present-Day Slovenia
Summary: The article is based on the study of informal features of celebrating the former national holiday, the Republic Day (of the SFRY), in post-socialist Slovenia: Yugonostalgic parties, concerts, political graffiti and street art, songs, various public events, news in the media and internet events (holiday greetings, Facebook groups, blogs, virtual Yugoslavias etc.). In the research I applied a combination of the usual cultural-studies methods (urban ethnography, sociology of time and critical visual semiology), which deals with these phenomena from the point of its production (top-down) and from the point of its reception (bottom-up). These celebrations are, on the one hand, increasingly commodified (in the sense of pop-resistance, painless provocation, pure entertainment or profitable market niche), while on the other hand, they present a critique, challenge, opposition and symbolic alternative to contemporary Slovenian dominant ideological currents and politics (ethno-nationalism and neo-liberalism)
Are the SEC\u27s Administrative Law Judges Biased? An Empirical Investigation
The Dodd-Frank Act significantly expanded the SECâs enforcement flexibility by authorizing the agency to choose whether to bring an enforcement action in court or in an administrative proceeding. The change has faced strong opposition. Federal courts have enjoined several enforcement actions filed in administrative proceedings for constitutional infirmities, and cases are currently winding their way through the appellate process. But even if any constitutional problems were remedied, controversy would persist. Judges, lawmakers, practitioners, and academics have raised doubts as to whether litigation before administrative law judges (âALJsâ) is fair to defendants. In advancing their arguments, they have relied heavily on a series of reports published in the Wall Street Journal purporting to show that the SEC enjoys a home-court advantage in litigation before ALJs. As documented in this Article, the evidence offered by the Wall Street Journal is deficient and its conclusions unfounded. This Article compiles and analyzes a large dataset of all enforcement actions filed in fiscal years 2007 to 2015. Contrary to the claim advanced by the Wall Street Journal and critics of administrative adjudication, SEC litigation before ALJs remains rare. Although the number of contested actions filed in the administrative forum has increased since Dodd-Frank, this is mostly due to an increase in actions that could have been litigated before ALJs prior to the Dodd-Frank amendment. More significantly, there is no robust correlation between the selected forum and case outcome. Federal district court judges ruled for the SEC and against defendants in 88% of cases, whereas ALJs ruled for the SEC in 90% of cases. This finding does not imply that the type of forum in which the SEC litigates does not matter. Rather, there are significant empirical obstacles to finding any useful results by comparing case outcomes
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