Financial Conglomerates and the Chinese Wall : Regulating Conflicts of Interest
by
Harry McVea
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
0198257139
ISBN-13
9780198257134
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Imprint
Clarendon Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Aug 5th, 1993
Print length
302 Pages
Weight
630 grams
Dimensions
24.20 x 16.20 x 2.20 cms
Product Classification:
Corporate financeCompany law
Ksh 25,500.00
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Examines how regulators ensure that the growing number of conglomerates are regulated sufficiently strongly to eradicate systemic risks and conflict of interest abuses, yet are flexible enough to allow the benefits of conglomeration to be secured. It looks particularly at the Chinese wall.
The growth of financial conglomerates, offering a range of services hitherto unprecedented, has caused problems for regulators. While conglomerates bring with them many economic benefits (diversification of risk, economies of scope, etc), they also impose costs (systemic risk and conflict of interest abuses). This book explores ways in which regulators can ensure that the regulation imposed is sufficiently strong to eradicate these abuses, but at the same time sufficiently flexible to allow the benefits of conglomeration to be secured.The Chinese Wall–a regulatory mechanism aimed at stemming the flow of information from one department in a firm to another, and reconciling conflicts of interest more generally–is singled out for special treatment. The legal position of the device, which has become all the more important in the wake of the recent Law Commission inquiry into the relationship between the Financial Services Act 1986 (and the rules made under it) and the general law, is considered in detail. The author argues that an effective Chinese Wall will, in most cases, be legally sufficient to absolve a firm from potential liability at general law, but that there are situations where Chinese Walls are not satisfactory. Here the conglomerate will have to suffer the commercial disadvantages of being a fiduciary by adopting a different, albeit more restrictive, regulatory option.
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