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Wednesday, 28 February 2018
New Zealand: FMA publishes new edition of its Corporate Governance Handbook
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Tuesday, 27 February 2018
Singapore: Financial Stability Board publishes peer review report
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Labels:
banks,
financial stability board,
insolvency,
resolution,
singapore
IOSCO consultation report: conflicts of interest and the equity capital raising process
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Monday, 26 February 2018
Jersey: commercial contracts and an implied term of good faith
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A term of good faith, even were one to exist, cannot it seems to us be used to qualify the general purpose and commercial rationale of an agreement. To act in good faith, expressed as its corollary, must be not to act in bad faith. Could it be said that a party to a commercial contract was acting in bad faith where on the evidence it acceded to some requests from the counter party and did not accede to others for its own commercial reasons? We cannot think that such could amount to bad faith or an absence of good faith in any event."
BCBS report on implications of fintech for banks and bank supervisors
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Friday, 23 February 2018
UK: Scotland: the Scottish Law Commission's tenth programme of law reform
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Thursday, 22 February 2018
UK: Treasury Select Committee launches inquiry into digital currencies and distributed ledger technology
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UK: England and Wales: Law Commission call for evidence on Commonhold
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UK: England and Wales: liquidators' appointment not invalidated by failure to give notice of resolution to floating charge holder
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The trial judge, HHJ Purle QC, held that the failure to provide notice did not invalidate the appointment of the liquidator first appointed or the appointment of the liquidator subsequently appointed when the company was placed in a creditors' voluntary winding-up. In doing so, HHJ Purle QC said that the cases on the appointment of administrators were of "no or limited assistance in the present context", stressing that once the special resolution to wind-up the company was passed, the company was placed in liquidation for the purposes of section 84(1)(b) of the 1986 Act, notwithstanding any failure to give notice as required to any charge holders.
Note: HHJ Purle QC retired as a senior circuit judge earlier this month, and was based in Birmingham's Business and Property Courts.
Labels:
england and wales,
floating charge,
insolvency,
uk,
winding-up
Monday, 19 February 2018
Luxembourg: Stock Exchange publishes revised edition of its Principles of Corporate Governance
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Friday, 16 February 2018
Australia: ASIC's surveillance of credit rating agencies
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UK: England and Wales: parent company liability in tort for harm caused by subsidiaries
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It was argued that RDS owed the Nigerian claimants a duty of care because (1) it controlled the pipeline operations in Nigeria from which the leaks occurred, or (2) it had assumed direct responsibility to protect the claimants from the damage caused by the leaks. At first instance it was held that there was no arguable case that a duty of care arose. This finding - albeit with criticism of the way in which the trial judge had reached it - was upheld by a majority in the Court of Appeal (Chancellor and Simon LJ; Sales LJ dissenting).
Labels:
england and wales,
parent company,
parent-subsidiary,
tort,
uk
Thursday, 15 February 2018
UK: PRA consults on proposed expectations regarding firms' governance and risk management of algorithmic trading
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Tuesday, 13 February 2018
UK: The Scotland Act 1998 (Insolvency Functions) Order 2018
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Labels:
england and wales,
insolvency,
scotland,
uk,
winding-up
Monday, 12 February 2018
Canada: corporate governance reform - an update
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Thursday, 8 February 2018
UK: PRA policy statement - insurers - board diversity and separation of the CEO and chair roles
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Labels:
bank of england,
board of directors,
eu,
europe,
insurance,
insurers,
pra,
prudential regulation,
solvency ii,
uk
Wednesday, 7 February 2018
UK: The Taxation of Securitisation Companies (Amendment) Regulations 2018
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Labels:
securitisation,
securitisation companies,
tax,
uk
Tuesday, 6 February 2018
UK: PLSA AGM review for 2017
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Monday, 5 February 2018
UK: FCA consults on EU Benchmarks Regulation implementation
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Friday, 2 February 2018
Singapore: High court finds 'insider reverse piercing' contrary to principle and unsupported by authority
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Where one chooses to conduct one’s affairs using a company, one takes advantage of the independent legal status of the company and the consequences that flow from that, including the fact that the property of the company does not belong to the shareholder and vice versa. It did not seem correct as a matter of principle that, having chosen to claim the benefits of separate legal personality, a shareholder could then avoid the disadvantages of the same by inviting the court to allow insider reverse piercing".
Thursday, 1 February 2018
UK: England and Wales: abuse of law and cross-border mergers
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At first instance, the trial judge, Birss J., held that the merger did not fall within the Regulations. The cross-border character of the proposed merger was, in his view, "only the result of a device" (para. [20]). The Court of unanimously disagreed: the proposed merger constituted a cross-border merger within the scope of the 2005 Directive and Regulations and did not involve any abuse of law.
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