Mealey’s Litigation Conferences

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Are Women Lawyers 80 Years Away from Partnership Parity with Men?

Posted by tomhagy on October 23, 2008

PRESS RELEASE

 

Philadelphia – October 23, 2008 – While women comprise nearly half of the nation’s law students, at least one group estimates that women will not achieve parity with men in law firm partnerships until 2088. 

 

And, according to the group, Catalyst Inc. of New York, a group whose mission is to “expand opportunities for women and business,” women of color face additional barriers.  Challenges for women attorneys also exist inside major corporations. 

 

Catalyst was represented on the faculty of a conference hosted this summer by BVR Legal (formerly Mealey Conferences), where topics ranged from work/life balance to getting ahead in the legal profession. 

 

Whether or not the 80-year path to parity will play out, women clearly face obstacles at law firms and companies.  BVR Legal will again provide guidance to women advocates with “Women in the Legal Profession: Achieving Partnership,” a teleconference scheduled for Nov. 19 at 1 p.m. ET.   The price of the program is just $99 for an individual or $199 for conference room access (number of listeners unlimited).  This professional education program is fully accredited for CLE. 

 

For more information go to www.BVRLegal.com, and click on “Teleconferences & Webinars” or call customer service at (503) 291-7963.   

 

BVR Legal, formerly Mealey Conferences and now a division of Business Valuation Resources LLC, is an education and information company serving attorneys and business experts in complex disputes involving insurance, torts and business assets. 

 

 

 

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DLA Piper Among Large Firms ‘Publishing’ Frequent News, Views on Financial Tsunami

Posted by tomhagy on October 9, 2008

Law firms are increasingly going straight to the Web with their own brand of updates and perspectives, creating a motherlode of free legal insights.  The urgency of the credit markets crisis has put many firms into high gear with fresh content going up daily.  DLA Piper is no exception.  Below are some recent observations provided by the firm.  More info at www.dlapiper.com.

 

September 21, 2008, Implications of the Global Credit Crisis and the US Government’s Response

1.    “Participants in the global financial services industry have witnessed developments this past week unprecedented since the late 1920’s: within the span of several days, a major investment bank (Lehman Brothers) was forced to file bankruptcy, one of the premier retail and institutional broker/dealers in the United States (Merrill Lynch) was induced to be sold to Bank of America amid concerns of its own solvency and survival, and a major insurance conglomerate (American International Group (AIG)) was rescued by a direct loan and guarantee program that effectively provides for this entity to be owned and operated by the United States government.  These developments occurred within weeks of the federal rescue of two crucial government sponsored enterprises (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac), and only months after the near collapse and government-guaranteed acquisition by JP Morgan of another prominent investment bank (Bear Sterns).”

 

2.   “The Treasury has been encouraging its counterpart agencies overseas to develop and implement comparable asset purchase programs.  The ability to extend the availability of the US purchase program to additional foreign entities having a significant presence in the US may, in turn, depend on the extent to which comparable programs are established overseas.”

 

3.   “In light of the broad ranging and dramatic nature of the proposals promulgated by the regulators and contemplated for passage by the Congress, the impact on individual businesses and their counterparties will be significant…”

 

4.   “By allowing hedge funds or other investors to hold amounts greater than 25 percent of the total contributions to the capital of a banking entity, without becoming subject to regulation as a bank holding company, banking regulators may create the potential of opening a significant amount of new sources of capital for investment in the banking industry.”

September 22, 2008, SEC Attacks Short Selling on Regulatory and Enforcement Front

1.    “With the issuance of a formal order of investigation, the Enforcement Division now has the power to subpoena documents and testimony relevant to its investigation into manipulative and ‘abusive’ short selling practices and illegal ‘rumor mongering.’”

 

2.   “According to the SEC’s press release, hedge fund managers, broker-dealers and institutional investors with significant trading activity in certain financial issuers or positions in credit default swaps will be required to disclose these positions, under oath, to the Commission.”

September 24, 2008, Update: The Global Credit Crisis and the US Government’s Response

1.   “Today the financial markets received the welcome news that investor Warren Buffett, acting through Berkshire Hathaway, Inc., is planning to invest $5 billion in Goldman Sachs.  The proposal, coupled with an additional capital raise by Goldman Sachs announced today, is being seen as a favorable indication of faith in the viability of the country’s financial system.”

 

2.   “This CDS [credit default swaps] market has been the fastest growing derivatives market worldwide in the last two years.  The sellers of CDS protection are often Insurance companies, and the risk of loss to sellers (in the event reference indebtedness is not repaid in accordance with its terms) increases exponentially.  This arguably increases systemic risk to the financial markets.”

September 29, 2008, Update: The Global Credit Crisis and the US Government’s Response

1.    “…concerns of Main Street bankers in smaller communities who are expressing anxiety at recent market turmoil, and communicating to their legislative representatives the fear that the Wall Street upheaval may result in contagion by smaller market participants in communities and industries throughout the US.  Indeed, legitimate fears exist, given European market developments, that such systemic breakdowns will accelerate beyond the shores of America to Europe and Asia, as well.”

 

2.   “Only one certainty remains: both the regulatory and the market landscape will be a radically different one in the months to come.  While once-hallowed institutions meet their demise by restructuring, liquidation, acquisition or bankruptcy, governmental authorities across the globe are calling for a new system of financial regulation amidst frank acknowledgements….that the old regulatory regimes are obsolete.”

October 1, 1008, The Global Credit Crisis and the Global Response

1.    “In the regulatory area, the Securities and Exchange Commission announced additional guidance on market-to-market accounting standards, in an effort to address concerns about the implementation of this regime and its impact on the financial services industry.  It is expected that this topic will be one of extended debate in weeks to come, as the goals advanced by such accounting treatment, providing for greater clarity and transparency in the valuation of assets, are outweighed by the difficulties of determining accurate values at times when market prices for such assets may be impossible to obtain in a deteriorating market.”

 

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