The Corporate Finance law school casebook contains sections on accounting basics, the time value of money, short and long term debt, preferred stock, dividends, stock subscriptions, merger financing, government securities, structured finance, derivative instruments, retirement plans, and insurance. It reviews recent accounting issues and related concerns raised by Enron and other corporate scandals resulting in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, which adopted a new regulatory structure for the accounting profession and imposed new obligations on lawyers involved in rendering advice on corporate finance. It also examines problems raised by complex financial instruments devised by corporate lawyers before passage of that act.
Table of Contents includes:
Corporate Finance—An Overview;
Some Basic Accounting Issues;
Interest Rates as Financial Tools;
Medium and Long Term Obligations;
Preferred Stock—Rights and Preferences;
Stock Subscriptions, Preemptive Rights, Dividends and Other Distributions;
Merger Financing and Appraisal Rights;
Publicly Traded Stocks—SEC Regulation;
The Government Securities Market;
Structured Finance and Securitization;
Futures and Options;
Over–The–Counter Derivatives;
Mutual Funds;
Retirement Plans;
Insurance and Indemnification. |