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  • John C. Coffee, Jr. – Boeing and the Future of Deferred Prosecution Agreements By John C. Coffee, Jr.
  • Leveraging Information Forcing in Good Faith By Hillary Sale
  • The Dark Side of Safe Harbors Comment bubble 2 By Susan C. Morse
  • John C. Coffee, Jr. – Mass Torts and Corporate Strategies: What Will the Courts Allow? By John C. Coffee, Jr.
  • Compliance’s Next Challenge: Polarization By Miriam H. Baer
  • Will the Common Good Guys Come to the Shootout in SEC v. Jarkesy? And Why It Matters By Eric W. Orts
  • Climate Disclosure Line-Drawing and Securities Regulation By Virginia Harper Ho
  • Board Committee Charters and ESG Accountability By Lisa M. Fairfax
Editor-At-Large Reynolds Holding

The CLS Blue Lion logo Sky Blog

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Columbia Law School's Blog on Corporations and the Capital Markets

Editorial Board John C. Coffee, Jr. Edward F. Greene Kathryn Judge

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Corporate Governance

Wachtell Lipton discusses Staggered Boards, Long-Term Investments and Long-Term Firm Value

By Martin Lipton and Marshall P. Shaffer December 3, 2015 by ilyabeylin

Recent econometric studies (“empirical evidence”) definitively rebut the position taken by the Harvard Law School Shareholder Rights Project (SRP) that classified boards are associated with lower firm value and inferior outcomes for shareholders. After correcting serious statistical and econometrical flaws…

The Nonprime Mortgage Crisis: Willful Blindness and Positive Feedback Lending

By Bernard S. Black and Charles K. Whitehead December 3, 2015 by ilyabeylin

The Wall Street Journal recently reported that federal prosecutors are pursuing criminal cases against bank executives for allegedly selling flawed mortgage securities. The crux of the cases? That the bankers ignored warnings they were packaging too many shaky mortgages into …

1 Comment  

Gibson Dunn explains Resolution Triumphs: Proposed U.S. TLAC and Long-Term Debt Requirements for G-SIBs

By Michael D. Bopp, Stewart McDowell, Arthur S. Long and Doug Smith December 3, 2015 by AJ

At an October 30th open meeting, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal Reserve) approved a proposed rule (Proposed Rule) that would impose Total Loss Absorbing Capacity (TLAC) and long-term debt (LTD) requirements for globally significant …

Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Sustainability

By David Millon December 2, 2015 by ilyabeylin

In a recently published book chapter,[1] I explore the prospects for corporate social responsibility (CSR) as a partial solution to the environmental sustainability challenge. Many large corporations affect the environment through their operational activities and their choices about product …

Millstein Governance Forum on December 10, 2015 at CLS

By Ilya Beylin December 1, 2015 by ilyabeylin

On December 10th, Columbia Law School’s Millstein Center on Global Markets and Corporate Ownership will be hosting its 10th annual Millstein Governance Forum.

For the past decade, the Forum has served as one of the premiere …

Who Should Pick Board Members?

By Yvan Allaire and François Dauphin November 30, 2015 by ilyabeylin

There is a frenzied rush for shareholders to get a new ‘right”, the right to put up their own nominees for board membership. Boards of directors, so goes a dominant opinion, are not to be fully trusted to pick the …

Fried Frank explains BMC Software and the Court’s Ongoing Incremental Path to Increased Reliance on the Merger Price in Appraisal Cases

By Steven Epstein, Brian T. Mangino, Philip Richter, Robert C. Schwenkel and Gail Weinstein November 30, 2015 by jbarrowscls

The Delaware Court of Chancery has been on a slow but clear path toward increased reliance on the merger price in determining fair value in appraisal cases. While the court’s reliance on the merger price as the best indicator of …

Too Big to Tax? Vanguard and the Arm’s Length Standard

By Reuven Avi-Yonah November 25, 2015 by ilyabeylin

Vanguard is the world’s largest complex of mutual funds, with over $3 trillion in assets under management, including $215 billion added in 2014. Vanguard’s main attraction to investors is its low costs. Profs. Freeman and Brown (2000) report that the …

1 Comment  

The Influence of Political Bias in State Pension Funds

By Daniel J. Bradley, Christos Pantzalis and Xiaojing Yuan November 24, 2015 by ilyabeylin

The propensity to favor local investments is not restricted to individual investors alone but is also common among institutional investors. It also exists in common equity and private equity portfolios of state public pension funds. This phenomenon, known as local …

On Thin Ice: Climate Change, Exxon, the NYAG and the Martin Act

By John C. Coffee, Jr. November 23, 2015 by ilyabeylin

The New York Attorney General, Eric T. Schneiderman, created a stir this month by opening an investigation of Exxon Mobil Corp. pursuant to the Martin Act (New York’s “Blue Sky” Statute).[1] Various Congressmen, Senators and environmental groups also asked …

2 Comments  

Gibson Dunn discusses Depomed Decision Highlighting Importance of Careful Monitoring of M&A Non-Disclosure & Use Obligations

By Eduardo Gallardo, Andrew Kaplan and Brian M. Lutz November 23, 2015 by ilyabeylin

On November 19, 2015, in Depomed, Inc. v. Horizon Pharma plc, the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Clara granted Depomed’s request for a preliminary injunction to enjoin Horizon’s hostile exchange offer to acquire Depomed. The injunction was …

Unions and Shareholder Proposals

By John G. Matsusaka, Oguzhan Ozbas and Irene Yi November 20, 2015 by ilyabeylin

Invigorating the shareholder proposal process is a top priority for corporate governance reformers. But the possibility that self-interested shareholders could use proposals to harass or pressure managers to accommodate their interests is a cause for concern. Union shareholders attract more …

1 Comment  

Do Managers Seek Control and Entrenchment?

By Paul Borochin and John D. Knopf November 19, 2015 by ilyabeylin

Do managers seek control of the firm, or the level of ownership consistent with entrenchment? Entrenched managers own shares within a range which is high enough to give them control, but sufficiently low to make other shareholders bear the brunt …

Sullivan & Cromwell discusses Proxy Access 2016

By H. Rodgin Cohen, Janet T. Geldzahler, Robert W. Reeder III, Marc Trevino and Bernd P. Delahaye November 19, 2015 by ilyabeylin

As companies prepare for the 2016 proxy season, the number of adopted proxy access bylaws has almost doubled in recent months and at least two new forms of proxy access shareholder proposals have appeared. On the company side, proxy access …

Are Voluntary Internal Controls-Related Audit Report Disclosures Informative in IPOs?

By Keith Czerney November 18, 2015 by ilyabeylin

The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX) requires management and auditors to opine on the effectiveness of internal controls for many public companies. One intention of SOX is to improve the reliability of information public companies provide to the financial markets …

Latham & Watkins discusses SEC Adopting Final Crowdfunding Rules

By Stephen P. Wink, Vivian A. Maese, Brett M. Ackerman and Sean R. Miller November 18, 2015 by ilyabeylin

On October 30, 2015, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) adopted final rules to permit companies to offer and sell securities through crowdfunding (the Crowdfunding Rules).1 The Crowdfunding Rules enable investors to purchase securities in crowdfunding offerings, subject to …

Is the Risk of Director Liability Really a “Myth”?

By Michael W. Peregrine November 17, 2015 by ilyabeylin

A recent scholarly article questioning the realistic financial liability exposure of corporate directors serves to prompt a larger discussion on the broad range of risks faced by directors, and actions that can be taken to mitigate those risks.

In the …

Legal Expertise and Insider Trading

By Chao Jiang November 16, 2015 by ilyabeylin

How does legal knowledge affect corporate insiders’ trading behavior? Do corporate insiders with law degrees trade differently from others? On the one hand, with a better understanding of regulations, legal insiders are more aware of the effects and risk of …

PwC highlights Ten Key Points from the Fed’s TLAC Proposal

By Dan Ryan, Mike Alix, Adam Gilbert and Armen Meyer November 16, 2015 by ilyabeylin

The Fed proposed its long-awaited Total Loss-Absorbing Capacity (TLAC) requirements on October 30th. As expected, the Fed’s proposal came out tougher than the Financial Stability Board’s (FSB) TLAC standard proposed last year,[1] including limitations on capital distributions and bonus …

Credible Financial Statements Help Firms Raise Financing and Increase Investment

By Nemit Shroff November 13, 2015 by ilyabeylin

One of the primary purposes of financial statements is to facilitate the exchange of capital between investors and companies. The extent to which investors rely on the information reported in financial statements depends on the credibility of those financial statements …

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