Programme Some sessions (see below) qualify for Continuing Legal Education credits. Click here or menu item above for further details |
A central theme in the outpouring of analysis on the causes of the global financial crisis is that large financial institutions created substantial amounts of systemic risk, which then was realized and nearly brought down the global financial system. Put in terms of corporate governance, two possibilities emerge. The management of large financial institutions were disloyal to their shareholders, the agents taking more risk than their principals desired, perhaps encouraged by highly incentivised compensation schemes. Alternatively, management loyally took on excessive risk, benefitting the shareholders and externalising the costs to the public. The first possibility suggests a corporate governance response in addition to reform of prudential regulation and resolution authority. The second possibility suggests greater emphasis on regulation, but with the possibility that the corporate governance system could be redesigned to internalise more systemic risk. What is the role of corporate governance in financial system reform? Are corporate governance and the new Financial Regulation complements or substitutes? If complements, how do we design their interaction? |
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08.30-09.00 | Registration |
09.00-09.15 | Welcome |
| Antonio Borges Chairman European Corporate Governance Institute | |
Professor Ronald Gilson Marc & Eva Stern Professor of Law and Business, Columbia Law School Charles J. Meyers Professor of Law and Business, Stanford Law School ECGI Fellow | |
Session 1 –Prevention *NYS CLE: 1.5 credit hours, Areas of Professional Practice |
This session will deal with issues like shareholder rights in financial institutions, conflicts of interest between shareholders, boards, conflicts of interest with bondholders, depositors and taxpayers, remuneration, gatekeepers, the "Volcker rule". |
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09.15-10.45 | Does Debt Provide "Market Discipline" for Banks? Professor Martin Hellwig Director Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods | |
Corporate governance provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act Professor John Coffee Adolf A. Berle Professor of Law Columbia Law School | |
Is Bank Governance Different? Professor Patrick Bolton Barbara and David Zalaznick Professor of Business Columbia Business School | |
| Moderator Claire Bury Head of Unit, Company Law, Corporate Governance and Financial Crime DG Internal Market & Services, European Commission | |
10.45-11.00 | Coffee |
Session 2 - Conference keynote speeches *NYS CLE: 0.5 credit hours, Areas of Professional Practice |
11.00-12.30 | Keynote speakers Michel Barnier Commissioner for Internal Market and Services European Commission | |
Troy A. Paredes Commissioner U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission | |
Antonio Borges, Chairman, ECGI David Devlin, Partner, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Dublin Peter Montagnon, Senior Investment Adviser , Financial Reporting Council | |
12.30-14.00 | Lunch |
Session 3 - Early Intervention and Resolution *Keynote speech: NYS CLE: 0.5 credit hours, Areas of Professional Practice Resolution Roundtable: NYS CLE: 1.5 credit hours, Areas of Professional Practice |
This session will deal with "Living Wills", powers of regulators, automatic versus discretionary triggers, convertible debt and preferred stock, cross-border resolution. How does the FDIC normally operate? Why will the new US rules work better than before? How do the European rules compare to the US rules? What forms of early intervention in the corporate governance of financial institutions are foreseen? How much would be desirable? Are the rules compatible across the Atlantic? Are we able to perform cross-border resolution now, within the EU and across the Atlantic? |
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14.00-15.00 | Keynote speech
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| Christine M Cumming First Vice President Federal Reserve Bank of New York | |
| Introduced by Professor Marco Becht Q&A moderated by Professor Ronald Gilson | |
15.00-15.30 | Coffee |
15.30-16.45 | Core resolution approaches Professor Jeffrey Gordon Alfred W. Bressler Professor of Law Columbia Law School and ECGI Fellow | |
| Banking resolution: lessons from economic theory Professor Xavier Freixas Professor Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona | |
| Moderator Mario Nava Head of Banking and Financial Conglomerates Unit DG Internal Market & Services, European Commission | |
Session 4 – Summing up, Assessment and the Way Ahead
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16.45-17.30 | Jonathan Faull Director General for Internal Market and Services European Commission | |
Ethiopis Tafara Director of the Office of International Affairs United States Securities and Exchange Commission | |
| Moderated session |
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17.45-23.00 | The 2010 TCGD Conference is being held in co-ordination with the 1st CONGRESS OF THE SOLVAY BRUSSELS SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT which takes place at SQUARE, Brussels Meeting Centre, Mont des Arts, Brussels from 17.45 - 23.00 for details and registration | |
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