The Marketplace of Ideas: Professor Coffee and Brandon Gold on the Wachtell Bylaw

The CLS Blue Sky Blog presents its first installment of our new series, entitled “The Marketplace of Ideas.”  The intent is to present different perspectives on the same subject by two or more authors.

Today, Professor John C. Coffee, Jr. …

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Editor's Tweet: Introducing "The Marketplace of Ideas" Professor Coffee and Brandon Gold offer different views on the Wachtell Bylaw

Why the Wachtell Bylaw on Director Compensation by Shareholders is Overbroad and May Fail Blasius Scrutiny

The following post comes to us from Brandon S. Gold, a fellow in the Harvard Law School Program on Corporate Governance.  Beginning in the Fall, Brandon will be an associate with Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP.

In a recent memorandum …

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Editor's Tweet: Brandon Gold discusses why the Wachtell Bylaw on director compensation by shareholders is overbroad and may fail blasius scrutiny

Sullivan & Cromwell Discusses last week’s new development in Delaware on “Don’t Ask, Don’t Waive” Standstills

In a preliminary injunction opinion issued on May 21, 2013, the Delaware Court of Chancery (VC Glasscock) found that the board of directors of NetSpend Holdings Inc., comprised of four directors representing private equity-affiliated stockholders that owned over 45% of …

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Editor's Tweet: Sullivan & Cromwell Discusses last week's new development in Delaware on "Don't Ask, Don't Waive" Standstills

An Incentive-Compatible Alternative to “Don’t Ask Don’t Waive” Standstills

In a recent essay forthcoming in the Delaware Journal of Corporate Law (available on SSRN), we argue that the current controversy over “Don’t Ask, Don’t Waive” standstills in M&A practice highlights the need to apply mechanism design to …

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Editor's Tweet: NYU's Professor Steven J. Brams discusses An Incentive-Compatible Alternative to “Don’t Ask Don’t Waive” Standstills

Wachtell Lipton Discusses Class Certification Case Standing in Contrast to Amgen

A divided Supreme Court ruled 5 to 4 [in the last week of March] that certification of an antitrust class action was not proper because plaintiffs failed to establish that damages caused by actionable antitrust injury were capable of measurement …

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Editor's Tweet: Wachtell Lipton Discusses Class Certification Case Standing in Contrast to Amgen

Can You Resign from the Board of a Troubled Company?

The following post comes to us from David A. Katz, a partner at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, and  Laura A. McIntosh, a consulting attorney for the firm.  The views expressed are the authors’ and do not necessarily represent the

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Editor's Tweet: Wachtell's David A. Katz and Laura McIntosh discuss Whether a Director can Resign from the Board of a Troubled Company?

Financial Services in 2013 and Beyond: Adapting to the New Regulatory Climate

The following comes to us from Charles M. Horn, a partner at Morrison & Foerster LLP. 

The enactment of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (“Dodd-Frank Act,” or “Dodd-Frank”) in 2010 was a watershed moment in the …

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Editor's Tweet: Financial Services in 2013 and Beyond: Adapting to the New Regulatory Climate http://wp.me/p2Xx5U-Y3

Latham & Watkins Discusses the JOBS Act after One Year: A Review of the New IPO Playbook

Latham & Watkins LLP has prepared a comprehensive report, “The JOBS Act After One Year: A Review of the New IPO Playbook.” The report focuses on Title I of the JOBS Act, which changed the initial public offering …

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Editor's Tweet: Latham & Watkins Discusses the JOBS Act after One Year: A Review of the New IPO Playbook

Should JPMorgan Shareholders Vote to Separate the Chair and CEO?

This Tuesday, May 21, shareholders at JP Morgan Chase & Co. (“JPMorgan”) will vote on whether the bank should separate the roles of chairman and CEO.  Currently, Jamie Dimon holds both titles.  The impending vote is not binding on the …

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Editor's Tweet: Jason W. Parsont of Columbia Law School weighs in on Whether JPMorgan's Shareholders Should Vote to Separate the Chair and CEO?

Sullivan & Cromwell discusses the Basel Intraday Liquidity Framework

The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (the “Basel Committee”), in consultation with the Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems, recently published a final document concerning supervisory monitoring tools for intraday liquidity management (the “Intraday Liquidity Document”).

The Intraday Liquidity Document …

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Editor's Tweet: Sullivan & Cromwell discusses the Basel Intraday Liquidity Framework

Approaching Deadline for Nasdaq-Listed Companies to Implement New Compensation Committee Standards

As annual meeting season approaches, so too does the first deadline for companies listed on the NASDAQ Stock Market (Nasdaq) to comply with amended compensation committee rules. Traditionally, evaluation of director independence of Nasdaq-listed companies differed for purposes of serving …

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Editor's Tweet: Arnold & Porter Discusses Approaching Deadline for Nasdaq-Listed Companies to Implement New Compensation Committee Standards

The Case for a Junior Equity Market

The following post comes from Professor Jeff Schwartz of the University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law:

The influential SEC Advisory Committee on Small and Emerging Companies recently approved a new set of recommendations.  The boldest among them is …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Jeff Schwartz of the University of Utah discusses the case for a junior equity market.

Outmanned and Outgunned: Fighting on Behalf of Investors Despite Efforts to Weaken Investor Protections

The following speech was delivered by Commissioner Aguilar on April 16, 2013 to the North American Securities Administrators Association (“NASAA”), Annual NASAA/SEC 19(d) Conference in Washington D.C.

Good morning. Thank you for inviting me to deliver the opening remarks of …

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Editor's Tweet: Commissioner Aguilar discusses fighting on behalf of investors despite efforts to weaken investor protections

We are the (National) Champions: Understanding the Mechanisms of State Capitalism in China

China now has the second-largest number of Fortune Global 500 companies in the world. Most of the Chinese companies on the list are state-owned enterprises (sometimes called “SOEs”) organized into massive corporate groups with a central government agency as their …

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Editor's Tweet: Professors Curtis Milhaupt and Li-Wen Lin of Columbia discuss the mechanisms of state capitalism in China

Wachtell Proposes Bylaw to Ward Off Threat of Conflicted Directors

This year, the practice of activist hedge funds engaged in proxy contests offering special compensation schemes to their dissident director nominees has increased and become even more egregious.  While the terms of these schemes vary, the general thrust is that, …

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Editor's Tweet: Wachtell Proposes Bylaw to Ward Off Threat of Conflicted Directors http://wp.me/p2Xx5U-XC

In Strange Company: The Puzzle of Private Investment in State-Controlled Firms

The following post comes to us from Professor Mariana Pargendler of the Fundação Getulio Vargas School of Law at São Paulo, Brazil.  

Despite prior waves of privatization, state-owned enterprises (SOEs) remain a fixture of the variety of capitalism embraced by …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Mariana Pargendler discusses her new article on private investment in state-controlled firms