How much does management influence shareholder votes?

In the paper, “Management Influence on Investors: Evidence from Shareholder Votes on the Frequency of Say on Pay”, which was recently made publicly available on SSRN, my co-author (David Oesch of the University of St. Gallen) and I …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Fabrizio Ferri of Columbia Business School discusses how much management influences the frequency of Say on Pay votes?

Sullivan & Cromwell Discusses How Companies Should Prepare for Potential Proxy Disclosure Litigation

Plaintiffs’ attorneys have continued to bring, or threaten, litigation against U.S. companies following the filing of their annual proxy statements. These complaints generally allege disclosure deficiencies in connection with the approval of equity compensation plans and/or the advisory shareholder “say-on-pay” …

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Editor's Tweet: Sullivan & Cromwell Discusses How Companies Should Prepare for Potential Proxy Disclosure Litigation

New York Officials Urge SEC To Adopt Rules Requiring Public Companies to Disclose Political Spending

This week, New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli and New York City Public Advocate Bill de Blasio urged the Securities and Exchange Commission to respond to a petition I co-authored with my colleagues John Coffee, Ronald Gilson and …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Robert Jackson. of Columbia Law School discusses New York's efforts to urge the SEC to act on political spending disclosure

The Separation of Ownership and Consumption

In our paper, The Evolution of Shareholder Voting Rights: Separation of Ownership and Consumption, which was recently made publicly available on SSRN, we show how the ownership patterns of early business corporations shaped their peculiar governance structure. While the …

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Editor's Tweet: Professors Henry Hansmann of Yale Law and Mariana Pargendler discuss the separation of ownership and consumption

Institutional Investors Should Not Facilitate Corporate “Ambushes”

The following post comes to us from Trevor Norwitz, a partner at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz in New York and a lecturer-in-law at Columbia Law School: 

In the upcoming proxy season, shareholders at several major corporations will be asked …

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Editor's Tweet: Wachtell's Trevor Norwitz explains why institutional investors should not facilitate corporate "ambushes."

CEOs of J.P. Morgan and Rio Tinto Get Some Bad News in 2013

In a 2010 article in the Texas Law Review entitled “Embattled CEOs”, Professors Marcel Kahan and Ed Rock argued that, over the past decade or so, CEOs of US public companies have gradually been losing power to their boards and …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Jennifer G. Hill of the University of Sydney discusses bad news in 2013 for the CEOs of JPMorgan and Rio Tinto

Paul Weiss Discusses Kallick v. Sand Ridge Energy, Inc.

In Kallick v. SandRidge Energy, Inc., the Delaware Court of Chancery, in an opinion by Chancellor Strine, enjoined the incumbent board of SandRidge Energy, which faced a consent solicitation initiated by a large stockholder seeking to de-stagger and replace …

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Editor's Tweet: Paul Weiss Discusses Kallick v. Sand Ridge Energy, Inc.

Recent Delaware Developments: Three Cases with Surprising Outcomes that Reinforce Traditional Fiduciary Principles

In three relatively low profile decisions issued by the Delaware Court of Chancery in February 2013, the court reached seemingly atypical results given the issued involved and the procedural postures of the respective cases.  The first decision was on February …

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Editor's Tweet: S&C's Krishna Veeraraghavan & Jason S. Tyler discuss three recent Delaware cases with suprising outcomes

Delaware Law as Lingua Franca

Delaware dominates the corporate chartering market in the U.S—it is the only state that attracts a significant number of out-of-state incorporations. As a result, incorporation decisions are “bimodal,” with public and private firms typically choosing between home-state and Delaware incorporation.…

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Jesse Fried of Harvard Law discusses "Linga Franca" as the reason incorporators may choose Delaware.

Should Angel-Backed Start-ups Reject Venture Capital?

My new Essay Should Angel-Backed Start-ups Reject Venture Capital? challenges the conventional wisdom that venture capital is a necessary – and even desirable – source of financing for all start-ups.  In particular, this Essay argues that some start-ups that attract …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Darian Ibrahim of Wisconsin Law discusses whether angel-backed start-ups should reject venture capital.

Shielding Corporate Counsel from Retaliatory Termination

My draft article, Blocking the Ax: Shielding Corporate Counsel from Retaliation as an Alternative to White Collar Hypercriminalization, recommends that the NYSE and Nasdaq amend their corporate governance listing standards to require that termination of a public company’s general …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Eric Alden of Northern Kentucky University Law discusses a proposal to shield corporate counsel from retaliatory termination.

A Primer on the Uncorporation

More and more companies appear with strange abbreviations behind their business name. Consider Chrysler Group LLC (instead of Inc.) or LVMH Montres & Joaillerie France SAS. Some even speak about the “endangered corporate form” and point to the rise of …

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Editor's Tweet: Joe McCahery of Tilberg University School of Law discusses his recent work on Uncorporations

Investigating Shareholder Derivative Claims: The Importance of Independent Counsel

A shareholder typically brings a derivative suit on behalf of a corporation against the company’s current or former officers or directors in one of two contexts:  either after the shareholder has demanded that the board cause the company to bring …

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Editor's Tweet: S&C's Bill Monahan and Adam Magid discuss the importance of independent counsel in investigating shareholder derivative claims

Wachtell Lipton Discusses Recent Decisions Stressing Potential Disclosure-Based Litigation Claims

With the 2013 proxy season now well underway, two recent decisions emphasize the potential litigation risks public companies face under federal and state disclosure law. These decisions highlight the need for companies to focus on disclosure requirements as they prepare …

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Editor's Tweet: Wachtell Lipton Discusses Recent Greenlight and Symantec decisions

Shareholders Need Robust Disclosure to Exercise Their Voting Rights as Investors and Owners

In the next few months, thousands of public companies will hold their annual shareholder meetings. I would like to take this opportunity to emphasize the importance of robust proxy disclosure to shareholders and to highlight areas in which the disclosure …

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Editor's Tweet: SEC Commissioner Aguilar discusses why shareholders need robust disclosure to exercise their voting rights

The Value of Lawyer-Directors in Public Corporations

The accepted wis­dom is that a lawyer who repre­sents herself—by acting as both a lawyer and a director—has a fool for a client.  In our working paper, Lawyers and Fools: Lawyer-Directors in Public Corporations, my co-authors, Lubomir Litov and …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Charles K. Whitehead of Cornell Law discusses the value of lawyer-directors in public corporations

Market Discipline: The Next Generation

My forthcoming article, Interbank Discipline, draws attention to the important role that banks play monitoring and disciplining other banks.  To understand the significance of interbank discipline, the Article proposes a new way of thinking about market discipline more generally.  …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Kathryn Judge of Columbia Law School discusses the next generation of market discipline.

Charitable Insolvency and Corporate Governance in Bankruptcy Reorganization

Poor corporate governance is a pervasive problem in the charitable nonprofit sector. Prominent examples of mismanagement and abuse include instances of intentional misconduct, such as embezzlement and unauthorized self-dealing, and negligent conduct, such as failure to diversify the organization’s investment …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Reid Weisbord of Rutgers Law (Newark) discusses his forthcoming article on Charitable Insolvency and Corporate Governance.

Jackson Discusses Corporate Political Spending With Bloomberg’s Lee Pacchia

Last week, Professor Robert J. Jackson, Jr.  sat down with Bloomberg Law’s Lee Pacchia to discuss his SEC petition to require public companies to disclose their political spending.  The SEC has received more than 300,000 comments on the petition, more …

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Editor's Tweet: Professor Robert Jackson of Columbia discusses corporate political spending with Bloomberg’s Lee Pacchia