Bankruptcy & Liquidation

Weil’s Marcia L. Goldstein, Heath P. Tarbert, and Kathlene M. Burke authored a column for The New York Law Journal discussing the recently finalized implementing rule in connection with resolution plans, or “living wills,” concluding that the regulations still leave a substantial degree of uncertainty as to what exactly it will take to ensure a plan is “credible.”

Access Full-Text Article from The New York Law Journal (may require subscription)

Systemic Risk: The Age of SIFIs and GSIBs

The Clearing House’s First Annual Business Meeting & Conference

November 9-10, 2011, New York Palace Hotel, New York, NY | Register Now

Weil’s Heath Tarbert is scheduled to appear as a panelist at The Clearing House’s First Annual Business Meeting & Conference, to be held on November 9-10 at the New York Palace Hotel in New York, NY. The conference will examine the commercial banking regulatory and payments landscape in the post-Dodd-Frank era, as well as other related legal and tax issues. Mr. Tarbert’s panel will discuss current Dodd-Frank rulemakings pertaining to the Orderly Liquidation Authority, Title II, Early Remediation, and resolution planning, or “living wills.”

As noted today in Weil’s Bankruptcy Blog, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation published notice yesterday in the Federal Register that they are adopting the final rule to implement the Dodd-Frank Act’s requirement concerning resolution plans, which are commonly referred to as “living wills”.

New ‘Living Will’ Requirements for Banks and Resolution Powers for Regulators

Institute of International Bankers

November 30, 2011, Harold Proshansky Auditorium, CUNY Graduate Center, New York, NY | Register Now

Weil’s Derrick Cephas will appear at the IIB conference Implementation of the Dodd-Frank Act – Key Issues for International Banks. Mr. Cephas’ panel is titled “New ‘Living Will’ Requirements for Banks and Resolution Powers for Regulators” and will commence at 1:45 p.m.

By:  Sylvia Mayer and Christopher Linden

The United States in the decades before the crisis allowed a large amount of risk to build up in a variety of institutions outside the formal banking system.  When the storm hit, that put enormous pressure on that system, causing a lot of tension and trauma across financial markets, amplifying the pressure on the formal banking system and adding to the broader damage caused by the economy as a whole.

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