The ongoing financial crisis has made it clear that bureaucratic supervisors and public enforcement authorities are encountering serious difficulties in ensuring both bank safeness and stability. According to part of the literature, securities class actions (SCA) can represent a complementary tool to public supervision in regulating and supervising markets and corporations. This paper aims at investigating whether SCA can also play a role in banking supervision acting as an effective incentive device for banks’ management to carefully evaluate risks and/or can represent a warning signal of risk of insolvency, which could be taken into account by public supervisors. Two groups of US banks are compared in the period 2000-2008. The first – treated – group includes banks that have faced a SCA in the past, while the second – control – group includes banks never involved in such a procedure. Results seem to suggest that collective private litigation procedures can be used to improve ex post regulation in the banking sector. Despite the fact that the empirical analysis is focused on the US experience, some general implications are derived. These may contribute to the current European debate concerning the banking sector regulation and the introduction of class action procedures
DALLA PELLEGRINA, L., Saraceno, M. (2009). Securities Class Action: A Complement to the Ex Post Regulation in the Banking Sector. In G. Bracchi, D. Masciandaro (a cura di), Quattordicesimo Rapporto Fondazione Rosselli sul sistema finanziario italiano (pp. 515-535). Edibank.
Securities Class Action: A Complement to the Ex Post Regulation in the Banking Sector
DALLA PELLEGRINA, LUCIA;SARACENO, MARGHERITA
2009
Abstract
The ongoing financial crisis has made it clear that bureaucratic supervisors and public enforcement authorities are encountering serious difficulties in ensuring both bank safeness and stability. According to part of the literature, securities class actions (SCA) can represent a complementary tool to public supervision in regulating and supervising markets and corporations. This paper aims at investigating whether SCA can also play a role in banking supervision acting as an effective incentive device for banks’ management to carefully evaluate risks and/or can represent a warning signal of risk of insolvency, which could be taken into account by public supervisors. Two groups of US banks are compared in the period 2000-2008. The first – treated – group includes banks that have faced a SCA in the past, while the second – control – group includes banks never involved in such a procedure. Results seem to suggest that collective private litigation procedures can be used to improve ex post regulation in the banking sector. Despite the fact that the empirical analysis is focused on the US experience, some general implications are derived. These may contribute to the current European debate concerning the banking sector regulation and the introduction of class action proceduresI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.