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ECON 252: Financial Markets

Lecture 12 - Misbehavior, Crises, Regulation and Self Regulation. After talking about human failures and foibles in the last lecture, in this lecture Professor Shiller discusses regulation to minimize the impact of human errors. He outlines five different levels of regulation: regulation on the firm level, on the level of trade groups, on the regional, the national, and the international level. Concerning the first level, he emphasizes the role of the board of directors as the regulators of a company, its duties of care and loyalty, and its responsibilities in the face of tunneling. On the level of trade groups, Professor Shiller presents the history of the New York Stock Exchange from the signing of the Buttonwood Agreement until today. The subsequent description of regional regulation centers on Blue Sky laws during the progressive era of the U.S. in the late 19th and early 20th century. On the national level of regulation, he covers the founding days of the Securities and Exchange Commission, its regulation of hedge funds, as well as its efforts against the trading of insider information and stock price manipulation. He complements his coverage of national regulation with the regulatory efforts in the aftermath of the financial crisis from 2007-2008, i.e. the creation of the Financial Stability Oversight Council and of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau by the Dodd-Frank Act from 2010, paired with the European efforts in the course of the European Supervisory Framework, also from 2010. With respect to the fifth and final level of regulation - international regulation - Professor Shiller talks about the Basel Committee on Banking Supervisionand the G-20. (from oyc.yale.edu)

Lecture 12 - Misbehavior, Crises, Regulation and Self Regulation

Time Lecture Chapters
[00:00:00] 1. The Importance of Regulation and Its Challenges
[00:08:10] 2. Firm Level Regulation: The Board and Its Duties
[00:25:37] 3. Trade Group Level Regulation and Its Controversies
[00:38:17] 4. Local Regulation: The Progressive Era
[00:42:59] 5. National Regulation: The Securities and Exchange Commission
[00:49:41] 6. Minimal Regulation: Hedge Funds
[00:55:39] 7. Market Surveillance: Preventing Manipulation
[01:04:25] 8. Regulatory Pushes at Home and Abroad

References
Lecture 12 - Misbehavior, Crises, Regulation and Self Regulation
Instructor: Professor Robert J. Shiller. Resources: Multiple-Choice Quiz [PDF]. Transcript [html]. Audio [mp3]. Download Video [mov].

Go to the Course Home or watch other lectures:

Lecture 01 - Introduction and What this Course Will Do for You and Your Purposes
Lecture 02 - Risk and Financial Crises
Lecture 03 - Technology and Invention in Finance
Lecture 04 - Portfolio Diversification and Supporting Financial Institutions
Lecture 05 - Insurance, the Archetypal Risk Management Institution, its Opportunities and Vulnerabilities
Lecture 06 - Guest Speaker David Swensen
Lecture 07 - Efficient Markets
Lecture 08 - Theory of Debt, Its Proper Role, Leverage Cycles
Lecture 09 - Corporate Stocks
Lecture 10 - Real Estate
Lecture 11 - Behavioral Finance and the Role of Psychology
Lecture 12 - Misbehavior, Crises, Regulation and Self Regulation
Lecture 13 - Banks
Lecture 14 - Guest Speaker Maurice "Hank" Greenberg
Lecture 15 - Forward and Futures Markets
Lecture 16 - Guest Speaker Laura Cha
Lecture 17 - Options Markets
Lecture 18 - Monetary Policy
Lecture 19 - Investment Banks
Lecture 20 - Professional Money Managers and their Influence
Lecture 21 - Exchanges, Brokers, Dealers, Clearinghouses
Lecture 22 - Public and Non-Profit Finance
Lecture 23 - Finding your Purpose in a World of Financial Capitalism