Professor Tamara
Belinfanti
This is a skills based course whose
aim is to provide students with an overview of the "nuts and
bolts" of doing a U.S. Securities law offering. The
course will be taught from the perspective of a junior transactional
associate at a law firm and will walk students through the different
stages from diligence to closing, which are involved in executing a
securities law deal. Stages that will be covered are:
(i) the diligence process; (ii) structuring the deal; (iii) documenting
and negotiating the deal; (iv) handling "mark ups"; (v)
obtaining "ancilliary necessities" such as required licenses,
necessary consents, debt ratings, stock exchange listings or clearance,
and auditor "comfort"; (vi) going to the printers; and (vii)
organzing closings. At each stage of the deal, students will explore
their role as junior associate and what their expected
responsibilities will include. Students will also be introduced
to the "cast of characters" that a junior associate is likely to
encounter on a securities deal, and examine the junior associate's role
vis-a-vis each character type - partner; senior and mid-level associates;
paralegals; underwriters/investment bankers; in-house consel; auditors,
etc. Finally, the course will explore the role of,
and protocol for, various types of group conference calls; one-on-one
phone calls; and client memoranda. the course will be organized
around the different "stages" of a deal and each class will
include a different "Fire Drill" issue/problem that students
will be invited to collaboratively work through and solve. Course
materals will be a combination of articles on law firm practice and
actual deal documents from each stage of the deal. Throughout the
semester, guest lecturers/participants from law firms, investment
banks and/or in-house deparmtnets will b invited to present
on topics and/or to participate in simulated class exercises.
Grades will be based on one or more written exams. Enrollemnt is Securities Regulation is helpful but not required.