June 3-4, 2016
Law and Banking/Finance Conference
Sponsors: NYU Law's Program on Corporate Compliance and Enforcement, NYU Law's Center for Financial Institutions, and ETH
Presentations and Panels:
Friday, June 3, 2016
09:15 Carolyn Sissoko (USC Gould School of Law), The Economic Consequences of Market-Based Lending
Discussant: Geoffrey Miller (NYU School of Law)
10:00 Victoria Ivashina (Harvard Business School) Covenant Light Contracts and Creditor Protection
Discussant: Barry Adler (NYU School of Law)
11:00 Jan Pieter Krahnen (Goethe University’s House of Finance, Frankfurt), Interbank Intermediation
Discussant: Bruce Tuckman (NYU Stern School of Business)
11:45 Roman Inderst (Goethe University’s House of Finance, Frankfurt), Interbank Lending and Regulation
Discussant: Ryan Bubb (NYU School of Law)
14:00 Samuel Lee (Santa Clara Leavey School of Business and Swedish House of Finance), Risk Management
Failures
Discussant: David Skeel (University of Pennsylvania Law School)
14:45 Adriano Rampini (Duke Fuqua School of Business), Risk Management in Financial Institutions
Discussant: Roberta Romano (Yale Law School)
15:45 Henry Hu (University of Texas School of Law), Complexity and Parallel Disclosure Universes: Rethinking
“Information”
Discussant: Jan Pieter Krahnen (Goethe University’s House of Finance, Frankfurt)
16.30 Simone Sepe (University of Arizona College of Law/Department of Finance and IAS, Toulouse), Hedge Fund
Activism
Discussant: Roman Inderst (Goethe University’s House of Finance, Frankfurt)
Saturday, June 4, 2016
09:15 Rainer Haselmann (Goethe University’s House of Finance, Frankfurt), The Political Economy of Bank
Bailouts
Discussant: Samuel Lee (Santa Clara Leavey School of Business and Swedish House of Finance)
10:00 Morgan Ricks (Vanderbilt Law School), The Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation
Discussant: Gerard Hertig (ETH Zurich)
11:15 Kathryn Judge (Columbia Law School), Information Gaps and Shadow Banking
Discussant: Victoria Ivashina (Harvard Business School)
12.15 Has Anything Changed since the Credit Crisis?