丑闻的交易谱系:从迈克尔·米尔肯到安然再到高盛

W. Bratton, Adam J. Levitin
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引用次数: 20

摘要

在过去的30年里,有三起丑闻重塑了商业监管:1988年迈克尔·米尔肯(Michael Milken)的证券欺诈起诉,2001年安然(Enron)的内部崩溃,以及2010年高盛(Goldman Sachs)的“ABACUS”执法行动。这两起丑闻一直被视为毫无关联。本文强调了将这些丑闻联系在一起的一种以前未被注意到的交易关联——一种被称为合成债务抵押债券的交易结构,涉及使用一个特殊目的实体(SPE)。SPE是一种新的、广泛使用的公司“另一个自我”形式,旨在为其创建者的会计和监管利益进行交易。尽管SPE被用来策划涉及数万亿美元的交易,并在基金会丑闻中声名显赫,但它仍然是神秘的,人们对其知之甚少。传统企业的另一个自我是拥有股权的子公司或附属公司。SPE避免了股权控制,而倾向于通过来自事务性文档的预设指令进行控制。从理论上讲,这些指示是完整的或非常接近的,使spe成为经济和法律理论中“合同关系”公司的现实表现。然而,在实践中,在经济现实的压力下,正式的分离指定并不总是站得住脚。如果再加上金融灾难,由于公司的传统法律模式与SPE的经济现实之间的不匹配,使用SPE的另一个身份甚至可能把一个很小的合规问题变成丑闻。标准的法律模型依靠股权所有权来确定企业的边界:股权在企业内部,而合同在企业外部。监管制度通过追踪股权来建立公司间的联系。spe通过合同而不是股权来疏通公司间的联系,从而逃避监管。将私人股本公司整合到监管体系中,需要对公司的传统法律模式进行彻底的反思。一种理论正在形成,不是来自公司法或金融经济学,而是来自会计原则。会计部门对这些丑闻的反应是放弃股权标准,转而采用一种分析方法,在这种分析方法中,风险、回报和控制权的合同分配就像股权的功能等同一样运作——这种方法重新划定了公司的界限。不幸的是,公司法和证券法没有提供类似回应的前景。因此,我们等待着华尔街交易工程师们的下一个基于自我的创新,他们的防御反应菜单还不完整。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Transactional Genealogy of Scandal: From Michael Milken to Enron to Goldman Sachs
Three scandals have reshaped business regulation over the past thirty years: the securities fraud prosecution of Michael Milken in 1988, the Enron implosion of 2001, and the Goldman Sachs “ABACUS” enforcement action of 2010. The scandals have always been seen as unrelated. This Article highlights a previously unnoticed transactional affinity tying these scandals together — a deal structure known as the synthetic collateralized debt obligation involving the use of a special purpose entity (“SPE”). The SPE is a new and widely used form of corporate alter ego designed to undertake transactions for its creator’s accounting and regulatory benefit. The SPE remains mysterious and poorly understood despite its use in framing transactions involving trillions of dollars and its prominence in foundational scandals. The traditional corporate alter ego was a subsidiary or affiliate with equity control. The SPE eschews equity control in favor of control through preset instructions emanating from transactional documents. In theory, these instructions are complete or very close thereto, making SPEs a real-world manifestation of the “nexus of contracts” firm of economic and legal theory. In practice, however, formal designations of separateness do not always stand up under the strain of economic reality. When coupled with financial disaster, the use of an SPE alter ego can turn even a minor compliance problem into a scandal because of the mismatch between the traditional legal model of the firm and the SPE’s economic reality. The standard legal model looks to equity ownership to determine the boundaries of the firm: equity is inside the firm, while contract is outside. Regulatory regimes make inter-firm connections by tracking equity ownership. SPEs escape regulation by funneling inter-firm connections through contracts, rather than equity ownership. The integration of SPEs into regulatory systems requires a ground-up rethinking of traditional legal models of the firm. A theory is emerging, not from corporate law or financial economics, but from accounting principles. Accounting has responded to these scandals by abandoning the equity touchstone in favor of an analysis in which contractual allocations of risk, reward, and control operate as functional equivalents of equity ownership — an approach that redraws the boundaries of the firm. Unfortunately, corporate and securities law hold out no prospects for similar responsiveness. Accordingly, we await the next alter-ego-based innovation from Wall Street’s transaction engineers with an incomplete menu of defensive responses.
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