Solution Manual for Investment Banks, Hedge Funds, and Private Equity, 3rd Edition
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Chapter 2 โ Regulation of the Securities Industry
Q1.
Q2.
Q3.
Q4.
Following the 1929 Stock market crash, Congress passed a series of Acts to
regulate the securities industries. Name four of these Acts and briefly
describe their purpose.
A. The four Acts are:
i. Securities Act of 1933 โ mandated all securities to be properly
documented and disclosed to the investing public.
ii. Securities Act of 1934 โ created the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) to oversee the trading practices of the
securities industry.
iii. Investment Company Act of 1940 โregulated investment
companies such as mutual funds. The Act mandated that openend mutual funds could not take on debt and closed-end funds had
restrictions on their leveraging capacity.
iv. Glass Steagall Act: separated deposit taking and loan making
โcommercial bankingโ from underwriting โinvestment banking.โ
A goal of many parts of U.S. regulatory legislation has been to
eliminate/minimize conflicts of interest between issuers, investment banks,
and investors. Provide examples of conflicts of interest in the U.S. investment
banking industry and the corresponding regulations that attempted to resolve
those issues.
A. Sell-side research vs.banking division: global research settlement;
spinning: global research settlement; insider trading: โ34 Act;
independence of outside auditors: Sarbanes-Oxley; commercial banks
vs.investment banks: Glass-Steagall; bankersโ involvement in
bankruptcies: Chandler Act; investment bank/mutual fund cross
holdings/mgmt: ICA 1940.
Disclosure of information to investors is another recurring theme in U.S.
regulation of the securities industry. Provide examples of disclosure required
by U.S. regulations.
A. Securities Act of 1933: investors must receive financial and other
significant information about a company offering securities for public sale;
โ34 Act: periodic reporting of information by companies with publicly traded
securities; ICA 1940: investment companies must disclose financial
condition and investment policies to investors; Sarbanes-Oxley: greater
disclosure of off-balance sheet transactions, disclosure and reconciliation
of non-GAAP financial measures; global research settlement: disclosure of
potential conflicts of interest between the research department and the
investment banking department.
What is the role of states in the U.S. in regulating investment banks?
Q5.
Q6.
Q7.
Q8.
Q9.
A. Only anti-fraud matters.
What type of U.S. securities offerings do not need to be registered with the
SEC?
A. Private offerings to limited number of persons or institutions; offerings of
limited size; intrastate offerings; securities of municipal, state and federal
governments
What is a โRed Herringโ?
A. A โRed Herringโ is a preliminary registration statement that has been filed
with the SEC and which carries a front-page statement (written with red
ink) which cautions prospective investors that the SEC has not approved
the registration and sales cannot be completed until a โfinalโ registration
statement is declared effective by the SEC and is delivered to investors.
Red Herrings are provided by sales people to their prospective clients to
educate, rather than to be used as a final sales document.
Before an SEC registration statement is declared effective, companies (or
their underwriters) that sell stock or are deemed to be promoting the sale of
stock have a securities law problem. What is this problem called and what
are its consequences?
A. Gun jumping. The company must withdraw the issuance until the SEC is
satisfied that no fraud or manipulation has occurred. The company may
also be required to pay a fine.
What are the โRisk Factorsโ in a prospectus? Why are they important to the
issuer and to the investor?
A. Risk Factors are disclosures about potential problems the company may
encounter, including possible losses, unpredictable revenue, capacity
constraints, reliance on suppliers, technological change, competition,
litigation regulation, customer mix, etc.
i. Issuer: The issuer must list every reasonable risk in order to meet
full disclosure requirements of securities laws and to therefore have
a defense in case they are sued by shareholders if the companyโs
share price drops.
ii. Investors: Investors should read these disclosures to ensure that
they understand all relevant risks before making decisions
regarding purchase of securities.
What is the significance of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 in relation to
the securities industry?
A. The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, in essence, repealed the Glass Steagall Act
of 1933 and allowed the creation of financial holding companies that could
participate in both commercial and investment banking, a practice formerly
separated by the Glass-Steagall Act. This act paved the way for
conglomerate, multi-service providers such as Citigroup and JP Morgan
and permitted the convergence of banking, insurance and securities
businesses.
Q10. What are some securities regulations in place in the U.K., Japan and China
that mirror U.S. regulations?
A. Japan and China: Originally separated the functions of commercial and
investment banks (these changes happened within a much shorter time
frame for China). Later, like the U.S., those restrictions were eliminated.
Also, various Japanese laws requiring disclosure and internal controls in
public companies were similar to those in the U.S. The U.K. also has an
SRO system like the U.S. Chinainstituted anti-fraud and insider trading
rules in 2005 similar to those in the U.S.
Q11. What are some major differences between the regulatory frameworks of the
four countries covered in this chapter?
A. One main difference is the U.S. has somewhat fragmented and
decentralized securities regulatory bodies, whereas in the other three
countries, securities regulation is centralized.
Q12. Compare the regulatory bodies of the four countries covered in this chapter.
A. The Financial Supervisory Agency in Japan, the Financial Services
Authority in U.K., and the China Securities Regulatory Commission are the
sole financial regulators in those countries. In the U.S., the two main
regulators are the Fed and the SEC. In addition, entities such as the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the FDIC also have
regulatory powers.
Q13. What does the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010 mainly focus on?
A. This Act mainly focused on protecting consumers, ending โtoo big to failโ
bailouts, improving coordination between various regulatory agencies,
identifying systemic risk early, creating greater transparency for complex
financial instruments and providing greater transparency for executive
compensation.
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