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  • John C. Coffee, Jr. – Boeing and the Future of Deferred Prosecution Agreements By John C. Coffee, Jr.
  • Leveraging Information Forcing in Good Faith By Hillary Sale
  • The Dark Side of Safe Harbors Comment bubble 2 By Susan C. Morse
  • John C. Coffee, Jr. – Mass Torts and Corporate Strategies: What Will the Courts Allow? By John C. Coffee, Jr.
  • Compliance’s Next Challenge: Polarization By Miriam H. Baer
  • Will the Common Good Guys Come to the Shootout in SEC v. Jarkesy? And Why It Matters By Eric W. Orts
  • Climate Disclosure Line-Drawing and Securities Regulation By Virginia Harper Ho
  • Board Committee Charters and ESG Accountability By Lisa M. Fairfax
Editor-At-Large Reynolds Holding

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Columbia Law School's Blog on Corporations and the Capital Markets

Editorial Board John C. Coffee, Jr. Edward F. Greene Kathryn Judge

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Corporate Governance

Game of Votes: The Lifecycle Logic of Tenure Voting Rights

By Maria Lucia Passador May 9, 2025 by renholding

Tenure voting rights, which grant increased voting power to long-term shareholders, reward duration, stability, and strategic patience. They allow founders and insiders to maintain control while accessing public capital. And when structured carefully, they can help create a shareholder base

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How Corporate Governance Shapes Social Costs

By Alvin Chen and Michael D. Wittry May 6, 2025 by renholding

Pay-for-performance is often championed as a possible solution to agency problems, aligning managers’ incentives with shareholder interests. But what happens when solving one agency problem creates another – between the firm and society?

In a recent paper, we develop a …

Comment  

How Corporate Lobbying Can Undermine Governance Rulemaking

By Qianzhou Du, Jiekun Huang, Pengfei Ye and Qiaozhi Ye May 5, 2025 by renholding

Corporations play an increasingly active role in lobbying, with a growing focus on influencing government rulemaking. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, corporate lobbying expenditures at the federal level reached a record $3.7 billion in 2024, accounting for 86.3 …

Comment  

Corporate Constitutionalism for Foreign Private Issuers

By James Chang and Sidney Burke May 2, 2025 by renholding

Lawyers for public companies across the world may not have expected this, but a recent UK appellate decision on an Antigua and Barbuda company greatly enhanced global shareholder rights.  The reason is straightforward – Antigua is one of a handful …

Comment  

The Partisan Divide Over Value and Values in State Pension Funds

By Dhruv Aggarwal, Lubomir Litov and Shivaram Rajgopal May 1, 2025 by renholding

Whose interests do public pension funds serve? On the one hand, they have a fiduciary duty to maximize value for the pension fund participants whose retirement savings they invest. On the other, they can use their considerable ownership stakes to …

Comment  

ISS Offers Preview of Continental Europe Proxy Season

By European Governance Research April 29, 2025 by renholding

European competitiveness: Following the results of the 2024 European elections and the release of the so-called Draghi-report, European competitiveness has emerged as a key priority and a major stewardship theme. European competitiveness is a broad theme affecting various aspects, ranging …

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How Tenure-Based Voting Regimes Affect Minority Shareholders

By Maria Lucia Passador April 25, 2025 by renholding

In a new paper, I offer a comprehensive, empirically grounded reflection on the evolving architecture of corporate governance in Europe, with a particular emphasis on the Italian regulatory and market experience. My focus is on whether tenure voting rights, which

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How Firm Governance Could Address the Economic Downside of Non-Competes in the Tech Sector

By Hamid Mehran April 24, 2025 by renholding

Issues of labor mobility gained significant attention last year following U.S. bans on non-compete agreements. While the debate on non-competes has many dimensions, this post focuses on how to address firm governance, improve labor welfare, and reduce the loss to …

Comment  

SPACs, Multiplan, and the DExit That Wasn’t

By Kirby Smith April 23, 2025 by renholding

Delaware courts reserve their entire fairness standard of review – the state’s “most onerous standard” – for, among others, cases involving conflicted controllers.[1] In recent years, there is a view that the standard’s application (or at least the procedural …

1 Comment  

How Not to De‑Classify a Board

By Andrew Verstein April 22, 2025 by renholding

Activist investors often think that the classification of boards abets sloth, protecting directors from shareholder input. Yet boards understandably value the durability and continuity of multi-year terms, which give them the bargaining power to pursue long-term plans. Companies often try …

Comment  

Taking Consequences Seriously in Bankruptcy

By G. Ray Warner April 17, 2025 by renholding

The dominant shareholder primacy model of corporate governance makes shareholder wealth maximization both the purpose of a corporation and the only legitimate consideration for decisions by corporate directors.  Yet that single-stakeholder model is under attack on several fronts.  Numerous scholars …

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Did SB21’s Changes to Delaware Corporate Law Harm Shareholders?

By Tiago Duarte-Silva and Aaron Dolgoff April 16, 2025 by renholding

On March 26, 2025, Delaware Governor Meyer signed into law Senate Bill 21 (“SB21”) updating Delaware’s corporate law. While there has been considerable discussion of whether the bill was beneficial or detrimental to shareholders, we show that there is no …

Comment  

The Strategic Evolution of Shareholder Activism

By Wolf-Georg Ringe April 15, 2025 by renholding

Shareholder activism has undergone a striking transformation over the past four decades. What began in the 1980s as a brash and often combative movement led by so-called corporate raiders has matured into a sophisticated, globally attuned, and strategically agile phenomenon. …

Comment  

Goodwin Procter Discusses DOJ’s Data Export Rule

By Omer Tene, Justin C. Pierce, Federica De Santis, Gozde Guckaya April 15, 2025 by eorozco

On April 8, 2025, a sweeping rule issued by the US Department of Justice (DOJ) took effect. The rule imposes restrictions—and in some cases, outright prohibitions—on US companies in connection with certain types of data brokerage, vendor relationships, employment arrangements, …

Comment  

Delaware’s Dual Class Dilemma

By Craig Ferrere April 14, 2025 by renholding

Founders and early investors increasingly maintain control of companies while holding small economic stakes in them – raising fundamental questions about how Delaware courts can enforce  accountability in corporate governance. In a new working paper, I challenge the courts’ …

Comment  

Davis Polk Discusses SEC’s New Flexibility on Draft Registration Statements

By Maurice Blanco, Roshni Banker Cariello, Derek Dostal, Joseph A. Hall and Michael Kaplan April 14, 2025 by eorozco

The SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance has announced improvements to its policies for draft registration statements that will be welcomed by both companies and underwriters.

Following recent statements by Acting SEC Chair Mark Uyeda calling for a return to the …

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Mayer Brown Discusses ISS Halt to Diversity-Based Voting Recommendations

By Anna T. Pinedo, Jennifer Zepralka and Alexandria Hasenkamp April 8, 2025 by renholding

On February 11, 2025, Institutional Shareholder Services, Inc. (ISS) announced that it will be halting consideration of certain diversity factors indefinitely when making vote recommendations with respect to the election and re-election of U.S. company directors under its Benchmark and …

Comment  

A New Path to Declassifying Boards: How Shareholders Can Circumvent Charter Roadblocks

By Mark DesJardine April 3, 2025 by renholding

For years, activist investors and corporate governance advocates have fought to eliminate classified boards at public companies. Classified (or staggered) boards, which only allow a portion of directors to be replaced at each annual meeting, are sometimes seen as a …

Comment  

Mandatory Corporate Law as an Obstacle to Venture Capital Contracting in Europe

By Luca Enriques, Casimiro A. Nigro and Tobias H. Tröger April 1, 2025 by renholding

Venture capital (VC) is a key driver of economic growth. A substantial body of legal and financial scholarship has examined the institutional factors that shape VC activity. In the first of two papers, we build on the idea that the …

Comment  

Paul Weiss Discusses New Tailwinds for Activists

By Andrew D. Krause, James E. Langston and Carmen X. Lu April 1, 2025 by renholding

The recent market downturn driven by uncertainty on tariffs, domestic policy shifts and the changing geopolitical landscape will continue to create new opportunities for activists in 2025. We highlight below how activism may evolve in the coming months:

Market Volatility …

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