International Enforcement Jurisdiction in Securities Law: A Comparative Analysis of U.S. and German Law - Michael Muller - Libros - Grin Verlag - 9783656021179 - 10 de octubre de 2011
En caso de que portada y título no coincidan, el título será el correcto

International Enforcement Jurisdiction in Securities Law: A Comparative Analysis of U.S. and German Law

Michael Muller

International Enforcement Jurisdiction in Securities Law: A Comparative Analysis of U.S. and German Law

Seminar paper from the year 2011 in the subject Law - Comparative Legal Systems, Comparative Law, grade: -, The University of Texas at Austin, language: English, comment: Die vorliegende Arbeit entstand im Rahmen des Seminars "Financial Markets Regulation" während des LL. M.-Studiums an der University of Texas at Austin. Gesetzgebung, Rechtsprechung und Literatur sind auf dem Stand von April 2011. , abstract: Money makes the world go round. If not a truism, at least it holds for financial markets. The amount of capital traded thereupon outreaches human imagination by far. At the same time, financial markets create specific dangers for their participants. These dangers are essentially predicated upon information asymmetries between companies as capital seekers and investors as capital providers. The traditional approach to eliminate these information asymmetries is by regulation rather than leaving the solution to the market mechanism . Thus, financial markets are regulated markets. The means of such regulation are usually twofold. First, capital seekers are imposed upon a duty to disclose material information. Secondly, if they do not sufficiently comply with this duty, sanctions are imposed. This, of course, poses the question of who can enforce these legal rules. The answer is twofold. Some rules create private causes of action enabling the impaired party to seek relief with the courts. Others provide for enforcement by an administrative agency. This, however, raises the question which agency is called to perform this task. Traditionally, the answer has been easy as financial markets used to be national markets. Consequently, pursuant to traditional concepts of sovereignty in international law, each country could and would determine the competent agency. Regulation was and still mainly is national. Meanwhile, globalization and the revolution in telecommunication technology have blurred the borderlines between originally separated financial markets. Financial mar


52 pages

Medios de comunicación Libros     Paperback Book   (Libro con tapa blanda y lomo encolado)
Publicado 10 de octubre de 2011
ISBN13 9783656021179
Editores Grin Verlag
Páginas 52
Dimensiones 148 × 210 × 3 mm   ·   90 g
Lengua German  

Mostrar todo

Mas por Michael Muller

Otros también han comprado