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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      July 2017
      May 2017
      ISBN:
      9781316665671
      9781107158504
      9781316610992
      Dimensions:
      (228 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.46kg, 216 Pages
      Dimensions:
      (229 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.33kg, 216 Pages
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    Book description

    This book opens with a simple introduction to financial markets, attempting to understand the action and the players of Wall Street by comparing them to the action and the players of main street. Firstly, it explores the definition of a security by its function, the departure from the buyer beware environment of corporate law and the entrance into the seller disclose environment of securities law. Secondly, it shows that the cost of disclosure rules is justified by their capacity to combat irrationalities, fads, and panics. The third section explains how the structure of class actions is designed to improve deterrence. Next it explores the economic harm from insider trading and how the law fights it. In sum, the book shows how all these parts of securities law serve the virtuous cycle from liquidity to accurate prices and more trading and how the great recession showed that our securities regulation reacted mostly adequately to the crisis.

    Reviews

    'One does not need to agree with Professor Georgakopoulos’ core thesis (I have a much more deregulatory view) to love this book. It is strong and provocative without being partisan. It contains an impressive up-to-date summary of legal doctrine, relevant institutions, current empirical research in finance and accounting, peppered with anecdotes and what old-school print press quaintly calls 'human interest stories'. It manages to explain basic finance concepts without math in the way that’s both correct and comprehensible. Students of law will find it useful to impose structure on the otherwise unwieldy and political field of securities law. Students of finance and accounting could use it to replace their favorite source of legal doctrine - a lunch with a law professor. The text strikes me as something that the author actually wants to be read, which deserves separate pondering and admiration.​'

    Katherine Litvak - Northwestern University, Washington, DC

    'American securities law has developed, since its creation in the 1930s, in response to changing practices and changing problems. As judges, regulators and legislators attempted to respond to the pressing issue of the day, focus turned from the forest to the trees and the theoretical coherence of securities laws as a whole has diminished. In The Logic of Securities Law, Professor Georgakopoulos acts to restore some of the lost coherence, tying together different strands of securities law around a simple yet powerful theoretical focal point - a virtuous circle in which liquid markets, accurate securities prices and low trading costs reinforce each other. By directing securities law to facilitate this virtuous cycle, law is given a clarity of purpose and those who study and practice the law are given a simple yet supple roadmap to understand and evaluate this complex and important legal field.'

    Amitai Aviram - Director of the Corporate Law Program, University of Illinois

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