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Showing results for:  “ribstein”

Backdating stock options is a crime? Go figure.

Yesterday, Former Brocade CEO Steve Reyes was convicted of all criminal charges brought against him in the Brocade backdating scandal.  (The ten charges included fraud, conspiracy, lying to the SEC, falsifying books, etc.)  I am thrilled.  Professor Larry Ribstein is not. To remind you, backdating stock options basically means lying and maintaining that stock options ... Backdating stock options is a crime? Go figure.

Webcast of first SEC roundtable on proxy process now available online

See here for the webcast and here for the agenda. Fellow bloggers Bainbridge and Ribstein participated as well as several other corporate law heavyweights.

Professor Bainbridge's Complete Guide to Sarbanes-Oxley

Is available here. Here is the description: Congress passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in response to major corporate and accounting scandals–and many consider the act to be the most significant change in corporate governance and securities regulations in the past seventy years. SOX requirements have brought about far-reaching changes for public corporations, private corporations, and nonprofits. ... Professor Bainbridge's Complete Guide to Sarbanes-Oxley

Some Weekend Blog Reading

Some blogging that may be of interest to TOTM readers: Andrew Gelman (for it) v. Tyler Cowen (against it) on the American Economic Association’s decision to add 4 new quarterly journals. Michael Giberson (Knowledge Problem) and David Fischer (Antitrust Review) on the Sirius-XM Merger, a story Keith has been covering here at TOTM. VC’s Todd ... Some Weekend Blog Reading

Shareholder Voting on Executive Comp. – What’s the downside?

There was an article this morning on CCN announcing Aflac’s decision to let shareholders vote on executive compensation.  A board resolution was passed to give “shareholders the right to a non-binding vote on executive pay packages that will take effect in 2009.” I veiw this step by Aflac’s executives as very savvy.  Why bother leaving oneself exposed to shareholder ... Shareholder Voting on Executive Comp. – What’s the downside?

Is There Really Less Securities Fraud? And If So, Should We Thank the Feds?

Securities fraud class-actions are down. In an op-ed in yesterday’s WSJ, Joseph Grundfest observed that both the number of such actions and the dollar value of total damages claims have dropped dramatically since mid-2005. Why has this decline occurred? Grundfest considers several possible reasons. First, the decline might be due to the criminal prosecution of ... Is There Really Less Securities Fraud? And If So, Should We Thank the Feds?

Manne on Shareholder Democracy

Henry Manne is back with another article in the WSJ.  This time Manne goes toe-to-toe with the “corporate democrats.” Profs Ribstein (“Shareholder democracy is just one of the burdens that public corporations have to bear these days”)  and Bainbridge (“it’s a brilliant spanking of the shareholder activists, which I highly commend to your attention”) have ... Manne on Shareholder Democracy

Two in the WSJ

Airlines and Antitrust. Kenneth Starr on Sarbox. The punchline: Even the statute’s co-author, Rep. Mike Oxley, has conceded that Sarbanes-Oxley was hastily written and enacted. In its rush to “do something” about corporate scandals, Congress overstepped the bounds of its authority. It is time to call Congress back, both to help our economy and reaffirm ... Two in the WSJ

Teaching Law Students Economics

Larry Ribstein has an interesting post responding to Professor Warren’s discussion of her own classroom experiences teaching Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute, 499 U.S. 585, 593-94 (1991). Professor Warren describes a discussion with her students involving the notion raised by Justice Blackmun that “passengers who purchase tickets containing a forum clause like that at ... Teaching Law Students Economics

Hey- That’s Robert Monks!!!

I needed a catchy title, to compete with Mann’s title below.  I could find no way to work “crack whore” into my title, however.  But I figured mentioning Robert Monks – shareholder activist qua shareholder primacy radical – would have a small bit of the same impact.  (Mind you, Robert Monks is a very very ... Hey- That’s Robert Monks!!!

Who's Got Blog Juice?

Paul Caron reports on scores using the “Blog Juice” calculator for a few of his favorite law blogs. “Juice,” apparently, refers to an Index score combining Bloglines subscribers (40%), Alexa rank (15%), Technorati ranking (30%), and the count of inbound Technorati links (15%). The Juice Index is not a very good measure of “Juice,” see ... Who's Got Blog Juice?

Thoughts on Walker on Backdating

Professor Ribstein responds to David Walker’s backdating article, which Bill highlighted here at TOTM a few weeks ago. Larry’s take? This is a useful paper as far as it goes. The problem is that it has missed a significant chunk of the “literature” on this rapidly developing topic that has developed in our rapidly developing ... Thoughts on Walker on Backdating