Readership: Practitioners working in corporate finance, conflict of laws, and insolvency law; investment bankers, custodians and operators of indirect holding systems, and financial institutions; academics and reference libraries in the UK and worldwide.
Maisie Ooi, Senior Associate, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
"...issues are explained with laudable clarity by Ooi...It is impossible in this compressed account to do justice to the sophistication of Ooi's treatment of these questions. The book is remarkably successful at wrestling some prodigiously complex material into comprehensible shape, ranging with apparent ease between securities law, corporations law and conflicts of laws...She succeeds on all fronts, descriptive and analytical. This is a remarkable piece of work." - Martin Davies, Melbourne Journal of International Law
"Ooi has provided a detailed and useful analysis of the conflict of law issues for both directly held and indirectly held securities...a valuable contribution to the debate...Ooi's analysis of the appropriate choice of law rules against the background of the Convention would no doubt assist in the consideration, implementation and interpretation of the Convention." - Asia Pacific Law Review
Introduction Part I 1: The present state of the common law 2: Analysis of choice of law rules which have been applied to shares 3: What is a share? 4: 'Transfers' or 'assignments' and 'pledges' of shares 5: Characterization Part II 6: The indirect holding system 7: Analysis of choice of law approaches for the indirect holding system 8: Assignments and collateralization 9: The effect of insolvency Part III 10: Statutory intervention 11: Revised Articles 8 and 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code 12: European Legislation 13: Proposed Hague Convention on the Law Applicable to Certain Rights in respect of Securities Held with an Intermediary 14: Comparison of choice of law treatments 15: Reformulation of choice of law rules