The European regulation of securities exchanges: regulated markets in an evolving technological and legal context
In: Diritto dell'economia 59
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In: Diritto dell'economia 59
In: Forthcoming in Edoardo D. Martino, Hossein Nabilou, Alessio M. Pacces (eds), Research Handbook on Comparative Financial Regulation (Edward Elgar).
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In: Preprint of chapter in Hanne Birkmose, Mette Neville and Karsten Engsig Sørensen (eds) Instruments of EU Corporate Governance: Effecting Changes in the Management of Companies in a Changing World (Kluwer Law International, 2023 Forthcoming)
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In: Financial Market Infrastructures: Law and Regulation | Edited by Jens-Hinrich Binder and Paolo Saguato | Oxford EU Financial Regulation | 2022
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In: The paper will appear in Kern Alexander, Michele Siri and Matteo Gargantini (eds), The Cambridge Handbook of EU Sustainable Finance: Regulation, Supervision and Governance, Cambridge University Press, Forthcoming 2023
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In: in Sean Griffith, et al., eds., THE ELGAR HANDBOOK FOR REPRESENTATIVE SHAREHOLDER LITIGATION (2017/2018)
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Right in the middle of the Covid-19 pandemic, the German federal constitutional court (Bundesverfassungsgericht – FCC) issued a ruling that sent massive shockwaves through the continent. Not only did the Court question the legality of the European Central Bank's bond buying program PSPP (Public Sector Purchase Program), but it also rejected the earlier decision by the CJEU in which this latter had found that program to respect EU law. The ruling is as such not directly concerned with Covid-19 measures, but it may have nonetheless important consequences thereon. In this contribution we will explore what those consequences may be. Apart from the direct effects on the ECB's pandemic emergency purchase programme (PEPP), we zoom in on the ruling's indirect consequences on the broader question of how to arrange solidarity in EMU. With regard to the latter, we contend that Weiss and the Covid-19 crises combined will test the basic models of solidarity the EMU relies upon: the models of individual fiscal responsibility, ECB based solidarity and the model of fiscal union. These models are assessed from economic, constitutional and democratic perspectives.
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Right in the middle of the Covid-19 pandemic, the German federal constitutional court (Bundesverfassungsgericht – FCC) issued a ruling that sent massive shockwaves through the continent. Not only did the Court question the legality of the European Central Bank's bond buying program PSPP (Public Sector Purchase Program), but it also rejected the earlier decision by the CJEU in which this latter had found that program to respect EU law. The ruling is as such not directly concerned with Covid-19 measures, but it may have nonetheless important consequences thereon. In this contribution we will explore what those consequences may be. Apart from the direct effects on the ECB's pandemic emergency purchase programme (PEPP), we zoom in on the ruling's indirect consequences on the broader question of how to arrange solidarity in EMU. With regard to the latter, we contend that Weiss and the Covid-19 crises combined will test the basic models of solidarity the EMU relies upon: the models of individual fiscal responsibility, ECB based solidarity and the model of fiscal union. These models are assessed from economic, constitutional and democratic perspectives.
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Working paper
In: European company and financial law review: ECFR, Band 9, Heft 4
ISSN: 1613-2556
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