Der Credit Default Swap Als Beispiel F R Derivate Und Der Fall Aig


Download Der Credit Default Swap Als Beispiel F R Derivate Und Der Fall Aig PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Der Credit Default Swap Als Beispiel F R Derivate Und Der Fall Aig book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

The Network Challenge


The Network Challenge

Author: Paul R. Kleindorfer

language: en

Publisher: Pearson Prentice Hall

Release Date: 2009


DOWNLOAD





While managers typically view business through the lens of a single firm, this book challenges readers to take a broader view of their enterprises and opportunities. Here, more than 50 leading thinkers in business and many other disciplines take on the challenge of understanding, managing, and leveraging networks.

Traders, Guns & Money


Traders, Guns & Money

Author: Satyajit Das

language: en

Publisher: Pearson Education India

Release Date: 2007


DOWNLOAD





EU Investor Protection Regulation and Liability for Investment Losses


EU Investor Protection Regulation and Liability for Investment Losses

Author: Marnix Wallinga

language: en

Publisher: Springer

Release Date: 2021-11-01


DOWNLOAD





This book examines the relationship between the EU investor protection regulations enshrined in MiFID and MiFID II and national contract and torts law. It describes how the effect of the conduct of business rules as implemented in national financial supervision legislation in private law extends to the issue of enforcement, and critically assesses this interaction from the perspective of EU law. In particular, the conclusions identified in the book will deepen readers’ understanding of the interplay between the conduct of business rules and private law norms governing a firm’s liability to pay damages, such as duty of care, attributability of damage, causation, contributory negligence and limitation. In turn, the book identifies the subordination and the complementarity model to conceptualise the interaction between the conduct of business rules and private law norms. Moreover, the book challenges the view that civil courts are – or should be – forced to give private law effects to violation of the MiFID and MiFID II conduct of business rules in line with the subordination model. Instead, the complementarity model is advanced as the preferred approach to this interaction in view of what MiFID and MiFID II require from Member States in terms of their implementation, as well as the desirability of each model. This model presupposes that courts should consider the conduct of business rules when adjudicating individual disputes, while preserving the autonomy of private law norms governing liability of investment firms towards clients. Based on analysis of case law of courts in Germany, the Netherlands and England & Wales, as well as scholarly literature, the book also compares the available causes of action, the conditions of liability and the obstacles investors face when claiming damages, as well as how and the extent to which investors can benefit from the conduct of business rules in clearing these obstacles. In so doing, under the approach adopted by national courts to the interplay between the conduct of business rules of EU origin and private law, the book shows how investors can benefit from the influence of these rules on private law norms. In closing, it demonstrates a hybridisation of private law remedies resulting from the accommodation of the conduct of business rules into the private law discourse according to the complementarity model, illustrating how judicial enforcement through private law means may contribute to investor protection.