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Books > Law > Laws of other jurisdictions & general law > Financial, taxation, commercial, industrial law > Company law
Combining perspectives from practice, legal theory and doctrinal
analysis, this book presents a comprehensive examination of the
questions facing the current understanding and future application
of corporate finance law, such as the optimal adaptation of
regulation in highly dynamic settings and the scope for innovation
in legal markets in light of the current debt crisis.
Corporate Finance Law in the UK and EU considers areas of corporate
finance that are likely to be of key importance in the next few
years including regulatory reforms, which are of present concern.
It also addresses timely and important questions such as the impact
of higher interest rates on capital markets strategies and how
directors should balance the demands for disclosure and
transparency with the cost of compliance.
Bringing together contributions from over 20 international leading
academic and practitioner experts in this area, this book provides
a comparative perspective of equity financing, debt financing,
European law and policy, and practical research on how to improve
and solve current problems related to corporate finance.
In der Insolvenz u ber das Vermoegen einer KG gehoert die
haftungsrechtliche Inanspruchnahme der Kommanditisten fu r den
verwaltungs- und verfu gungsbefugten Insolvenzverwalter zu dessen
Pflichtprogramm. Eine Analyse der diesbezu glichen Rechtsprechung
und Literaturpublikationen der jungeren Vergangenheit offenbaren
indes, dass dieses Pflichtprogramm eine Vielzahl von rechtlichen
Schwierigkeiten in sich birgt. Der Autor eruiert dabei die
wesentlichen Streitfragen und setzt sich mit Ihnen im Wege einer
wissenschaftlichen Diskussion auseinander. Immer wieder treten
dabei die zu erwartenden Folgen fur die Praxis in den Vordergrund
der Diskussion. Berucksichtigt wird darin nicht nur die
idealtypische KG, sondern auch die als KG ausgestalteten
Publikumsgesellschaften sowie die GmbH & Co. KG.
Since the financial crisis, one of the key priorities of the
Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and Prudential Regulation
Authority (PRA) has been individual accountability. This book
addresses the regulatory and employment law challenges that arise
from the FCA's and PRA's requirements. The expert team of writers
examine in depth the provisions of the Financial Services and
Markets Act 2000 which relate to individuals, and the associated
requirements of the PRA and FCA. The topics addressed include: The
Senior Manager, Certification and Approved Person Regimes
Regulatory references and whistleblowing Disciplinary
investigations, enforcement and sanctions Notifications, 'Form C',
and fitness & propriety Bonus disputes and the Remuneration
Code Conduct and Pay in the Financial Services Industry considers
the full extent of an individual's employment, from pre-contractual
discussions to the post-termination clawback of remuneration. It is
a vital reference for lawyers and human resources professionals
working within the financial services industry, both in-house and
in private practice. It will also be of interest to all academics,
regulators and policy-makers involved in this sector.
This handy new book provides a reference collection of all the
texts of default articles of association which have applied to
companies registered since 1856. As such it offers a reference
source for lawyers giving advice to private companies on the text
of the articles of association relevant the point of formation of
the company.
There are currently seven main sets of default articles, dating
from 1856, 1862, 1906, 1908, 1929, 1948 and 1985. The 1948 and 1985
sets have been repeatedly amended. This collection of default
articles will also include any new default articles under the
proposed Companies Act due to follow by Regulation in 2007.
Derek French's commentary provides a summary of the law and
articles of association including any changes made by the Companies
Act. Each provision of each set of articles is followed by a note
giving the equivalent provision in the preceding and succeeding
texts so that historical development can be traced.
Die Bankrechtliche Vereinigung - Wissenschaftliche Gesellschaft
fA1/4r Bankrecht e.V. - hat ihren Bankrechtstag 2000 am 30. Juni
2000 in Wien angesichts der besonderen Bedeutung unter das Thema
"Funktionsauslagerung (Outsourcing) bei Kreditinstituten" gestellt.
Studies of corporate governance traditionally focus on the
governance problems of large publicly held firms, and policymakers'
recommendations often focus on such firms. However most small
firms, and in many countries, even many large companies, are
closely held. This book provides a comprehensive account of closely
held businesses and their particular governance problems. It
explores current discussions and reforms in Europe, the United
States, and Asia providing a state of the art account of the law
and the economics.
Closely held firms encompass a vast range, from corporations with
the potential to go public through family-owned firms, group-owned
firms, private equity and hedge funds, to joint ventures and
unlisted mass-privatized corporations with a relatively high number
of shareholders.
The governance of closely held companies has traditionally been
concerned with protecting investors and creditors from managerial
opportunism. However, the virtual elimination of the distinction
between partnerships and corporations means that an effective legal
governance framework must also offer mechanisms to protect
shareholders from the misconduct of other shareholders.
This volume examines policy and economic measurements to develop a
framework for understanding what constitutes good governance in
closely held companies. The authors examine how control is gained
in the various types of closely held firms and explore the
mechanisms that contribute to the development of a modern and
efficient governance framework for these companies. The book
concludes with an exploration of how the closely held firm is
likely to stimulate growth and extend innovation and
development.
Based upon the work done to prepare and implement a Model Law drawn
up for the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD),
this book provides a comparative account of the laws relating to
secured lending in the 27 EBRD member states in Eastern Europe
(including Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania,
Russia and the Slovak Republic). Since many of the former
Soviet-bloc countries have joined the EU, increasing amounts of
money are being invested by western companies and financial
institutions into Eastern Europe generally. Knowledge of the
applicable laws relating to security is vital to such investment
and lending.
This is an explanatory and practical book. Throughout the book the
theme will be what characteristics make a security law useful from
a practical point of view. Hence, the purpose of the book is not
merely to describe existing rules on security but to concentrate on
how those rules can be made practical. The EBRD's Model Law on
Secured Transactions and the EBRD's Core Principles for a Modern
Security Law serve as basic reference points. In addition, the
author introduces a comparative perspective in order to make the
reader aware of significant differences between various national
security laws. The main reference systems are English, German and
US-American law. The principles of security law developed under
western legal systems are contrasted with the principles of
security law as they can now be described after 15 years of legal
reforms in central and eastern European countries.
This set deals with the problems generated by those cases of
insolvency (either of an individual or of a company) where the
presence of contacts with more than one system of law brings into
operation the principles and methods of private international law
(also known as conflict of laws).
Part I of the main work is mainly devoted to an examination of the
body of rules and practice that has evolved in England during the
course of the past two-and-a-half centuries, and surveys the
current state of the law derived from a blend of statutory and case
authorities. Contrasting approaches under a selection of foreign
systems -- principally Australia, Canada, France and the USA -- are
examined by way of comparison. There are up-to-date accounts of the
circumstances under which insolvency proceedings can be opened in
respect of debtors which are not primarily based in England, and of
the grounds on which English courts will recognize foreign
insolvency proceedings and give assistance to the foreign
representative of the debtor's estate.
Part II of the main work explores the progress towards the
creation of international arrangements to co-ordinate and
rationalize the conduct of insolvency proceedings which have
cross-border features, particularly where the debtor is capable of
being subjected to concurrent proceedings in two or more
jurisdictions. Central to the developments described in detail in
this Part are the EC Regulation on Insolvency Proceedings and the
UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency.
This set includes the supplement to the second edition, which
covers key developments in case law and legislation in the subject
up to October 2006, and is an essential purchasefor all who have
already bought the main work. It includes the full text of the
Cross-Border Insolvency Regulations 2006, along with commentary on
the regulations. The supplement also includes the text of Council
Regulation 694/2006, amending EC Regulation 1346/2000 on insolvency
proceedings, and references to key developments in case law,
including Eurofood IFSC Ltd, Daisytek ISA, and Cambridge Gas
Transport Corp v Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of
Navigator Holdings plc. The commentary on case developments links
back to the relevant paragraph in the main work.
New to this Edition:
New supplement updating the second edition with commentary on
recent developments, to October 2006
Major recasting of chapter 6 (formerly dealing with the (by then)
dormant EC Convention on Insolvency Proceedings) now giving an
account of the EC Regulation on Insolvency Proceedings, in force
since 31 May 02
Adjustments throughout the book to explain the impact of the
Regulation on other aspects of law and practice
Full account is taken of statutory and case law developments since
1998
There is a new chapter assessing other international developments
since 1998 including the ALI Transnational Insolvency Project; the
World Bank Principles and Guidelines; and the UNCITRAL Legislative
Guide on Insolvency Law (completed 2004)
Progressive Corporate Governance for the 21st Century is a wide
ranging and ambitious study of why corporate governance is the
shape that it is, and how it can be better. The book sets out the
emergence of shareholder primacy orientated corporate governance
using a study of historical developments in the United Kingdom and
the United States. Talbot sees shareholder primacy as a political
choice made by governments, not a 'natural' feature of the
inevitable market. She describes the periods of progressive
corporate governance which governments promoted in the middle of
the 20th century using a close examination of the theories of the
company which then prevailed. She critically examines the rise of
neoliberal theories on the company and corporate governance and
argues that they have had a negative and regressive impact on
social and economic development. In examining contemporary
corporate governance she shows how regulatory styles as informed
and described by prevailing regulatory theories, enables neoliberal
outcomes. She illustrates how United Kingdom-derived corporate
governance codes have informed the corporate governance initiatives
of European and global institutions. From this she argues that
neoliberalism has re-entered ex command transition economies
through those United Kingdom and OECD inspired corporate governance
Codes over a decade after the earlier failed and destructive
neoliberal prescriptions for transition had been rejected.
Throughout, Talbot argues that shareholder primacy has socially
regressive outcomes and firmly takes a stand against current
initiatives to enhance shareholder voting in such issues as
director remuneration. The book concludes with a series of
proposals to recalibrate the power between those involved in
company activity; shareholders, directors and employees so that the
public company can begin to work for the public and not
shareholders.
This work presents a comparative study of the provisions relating
to insider dealing under the EC Insider Dealing Directive. The
volume begins with a discussion of the rationale for regulating
financial services in general and controlling insider dealing and
money-laundering in particular. It examines the definition of an
insider and of inside information and the various criminal offenses
relating to insider dealing. The role of money-laundering is also
recognized and the anti-money laundering regime as well as the
considerable impact on the financial sector is discussed in detail.
The work assesses the efficacy of criminal law in controlling
insider dealing and considers the increasing trend to deal with it
by means of civil/administrative measures.
This second edition of Merger Control in the EU provides the reader
with an exhaustive analysis of the European Community rules
relating to merger control, including the new EC Merger Regulation
139/2004 of 20 January 2004 which entered into force on 1 May 2004
and the latest interpretive notices adopted by the European
Commission. A brand new addition to the book is the companion
website which will maintain the currency of the main work after
publication; a service that is free of charge to all who own a copy
of the book. The European Commission has exclusive competence to
authorise or prohibit concentrations which have a Community
dimension. Bearing in mind the economic relevance of these
operations, decisions made by the Commission have an extraordinary
market impact. This work is an invaluable and precise instrument
for legal practitioners and economists, as well as for those
undertakings involved in merger operations or acquisitions. It will
enable them to become acquainted with the Commission's policy in
this field and to guide themselves through the complex procedure of
notification in Brussels. It will also be useful for those merger
operations which are required to follow the procedure of
notification to the national competition authorities in EU Member
States, since the Commission's guidelines inspire, to a large
extent, the acts and decisions of the national authorities in this
field. This book analyses the issues related to merger control not
only from a legal standpoint, but also from an economic one. It is
a product of the authors' knowledge and experience in Brussels as
officials of DG Competition in the Commission, and as lawyers
defending the interests of undertakings involved in the
notification procedure.
This fourth edition of Business Law offers comprehensive and
accessible coverage of the key aspects of business law. Established
legal topics such as the English legal system, Contract, Consumer,
Intellectual Property, Company and Employment Law, and emerging
areas such as Health, Safety and Environmental Law are all
addressed in the context of business. The work has been thoroughly
updated to include all the major recent developments in business
law, such as the new EU Trade Secrets Directive and case outcomes
decided since the publication of the last edition. The book also
discusses the impact of Brexit. In addition, the book features
extensive diagrams and tables, revision summaries, reading lists,
and clear key case boxes for easy reference. This book is ideal
reading for undergraduate law and business studies students, while
also applicable to practitioners and those with a more general
interest in business law.
This book exposes a migration of business practices, players, and
norms into philanthropy that strains the regulatory regime
sustaining public trust in elite generosity through accountability
and transparency and proposes legal reforms and private solutions
to restore it. Practices, players, and norms native to the business
sector have migrated into philanthropy, shattering longstanding
barriers between commerce and charity. Philanthropies organized as
limited liability companies, donor-advised funds sponsored by
investment company giants, and strategic corporate philanthropy
programs aligning charitable giving by multinationals with their
business objectives paint a startling new picture of elite giving.
In For-Profit Philanthropy, Dana Brakman Reiser and Steven A. Dean
reveal that philanthropy law has long operated as strategic
compromise, binding ordinary Americans and elites together in a
common purpose. At its center stands the private foundation. The
authors show how the foundation neatly combines donor autonomy with
a regulatory framework to elevate the public's voice. This
framework compels foundations to spend a small but meaningful
portion of the assets their elite donors have pledged to the public
each year. Prophylactic restrictions separate foundations from
their funders' business and political interests. And foundations
must disclose more about the sources and uses of their assets than
any other business or charity. The philanthropic innovations
increasingly espoused by America's most privileged individuals and
powerful companies prioritize donor autonomy and privacy, casting
aside the foundation and the tools it provides elites to
demonstrate their good faith. By threatening to displace impactful
charity with hollow virtue signaling, these actions also jeopardize
the public's faith in the generosity of those at the top. Private
ordering, targeted regulation, or a new strategic bargain could
strike a modern balance, preserving the benefits of the compromise
between the modest and the mighty. For-Profit Philanthropy offers a
detailed roadmap to show how it can be accomplished.
A detailed and authoritative practitioner work on mergers and acquisitions of companies in the US and UK, this will be an important reference for lawyers on both sides of the Atlantic (including all major companies with dealings in those jurisdictions). It covers law and practice in the US and UK in equal detail: the US chapters cover both federal and key state regulatory regimes; UK chapters include coverage of the City Code and developments in the European Union.
Harmonisation of law, a term that refers to an effort to bring two
different legal traditions in harmony with one another, has
developed a rather negative connotation over time when mentioned in
the context of Shari'ah and common law. Harmonisation began to be
looked at as an attempt by one legal system to impose its values on
the other. A major reason for that is the lack of understanding of
the scope to which these two legal traditions converge. One of the
principal findings of this book is that Shari'ah and common law
have many more commonalities than differences. As a result, the
need for harmonisation between the two might have been exaggerated.
The similarities do not need to be harmonised. Rather, they need to
be acknowledged and appreciated. If the differences between
Shari'ah and common law, which undoubtedly exist as evidenced in
this book, are approached from the position of appreciation for
commonalities, the ambiance to reconcile the differences would be
more conducive to the harmonisation process which would, in that
case, be reflective of compromise. This book is intended to help
readers better understand Shari'ah and common law and aid
harmonization efforts when needed.
The English law of contribution and reimbursement is essentially concerned with any situation where two parties must both pay a debt to a third party, compensate him for harm that he has suffered at their hands, or restore an enrichment which they have unjustly gained at his expense. These situations give rise to questions of how the parties' common liability should be shared and how their relationships with the third party, and with one another, should be adjusted so as to ensure that they each pay their proper share. This book is based on the rules of English law which determine the answers to these questions.
Baffled by joint venture and shareholder agreements? Guidance on
the new PSC Register is just one of the things that small
businesses need to understand. Helping you to identify the central
issues involved in joint venture transactions, take effective
instructions and draft good documentation using precedents, case
studies and checklists. Now covers: Brexit 2020 and its impact on
competition law, UK and EU; Changes to tax aspects arising from the
latest Finance Acts; New case law such as - Guest Services
Worldwide Ltd v. Shelmerdine [2020] EWCA Civ 85 (CA)
(non-competition clauses in shareholders' agreements) and Global
Corporate Limited v. Hale [2018] EWCA Civ 2618 (CA) (when payments
to a director/shareholder were dividends) Key content includes:
Preliminary considerations: A discussion of the nature of joint
ventures and shareholders' agreements; Financing the venture; Tax
and accounting considerations for UK corporate joint ventures;
Regulatory matters; Employment and pension issues. Key issues in
structuring and drafting UK corporate joint venture documentation
and shareholders' agreements: Deadlock and minority protection;
Voting rights and board representation; Restrictive covenants.
Joint ventures and shareholders' agreements in practice: Articles
of association; Transfers of assets; EU and UK Competition law
including Brexit issues.
Commercial Law comprehensively meets the needs of undergraduates
studying the law relating to agency, the sale of goods and consumer
credit and the detailed, critical nature of the book means that it
will also be invaluable for postgraduate courses. It will be
equally indispensible for practitioners seeking a detailed work of
reference. Commercial Law balances a readable exposition of
principle with an explanation of the policy underpinning the rules
of commercial law. The law is traced from its beginnings to the
present day and so the reader gains a satisfying contextual
overview of the development of the rules and their changing form
and function. Moreover, the law is subjected to thorough analysis,
evaluation and criticism, and there is much reference to material
from other jurisdictions, thereby giving the reader an informed
coherent view of the law.
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