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Unit information: International Corporate Finance in 2019/20

Please note: Due to alternative arrangements for teaching and assessment in place from 18 March 2020 to mitigate against the restrictions in place due to COVID-19, information shown for 2019/20 may not always be accurate.

Please note: you are viewing unit and programme information for a past academic year. Please see the current academic year for up to date information.

Unit name International Corporate Finance
Unit code LAWDM0116
Credit points 30
Level of study M/7
Teaching block(s) Teaching Block 4 (weeks 1-24)
Unit director Dr. Lu
Open unit status Not open
Pre-requisites

None

Co-requisites

None

School/department University of Bristol Law School
Faculty Faculty of Social Sciences and Law

Description including Unit Aims

This unit will explore the legal rules which govern the procedures followed by companies when they want to raise funds. It will be divided into two major parts: a) equity financing: the raising of capital following corporate law rules (minimum capital requirements, capital variations, the protection of shareholder rights when raising capital, the issuance of shares, financial assistance, etc.) and the raising of capital through the markets under securities regulations (IPOs, prospectus disclosure, ongoing disclosure of listed companies, market abuse, etc.) and b) debt financing, including banking and bankruptcy rules covering issues such as: debentures, fixed and floating charges, charges of book debts, specialised forms of finance such as project finance and trade finance, security, bonds, insolvency issues and priority for the payment, pari passu clauses, registration requirements, etc.

Through the examination of both equity and debt-based sources of financing, this module offers a fruitful combination of company law, securities regulation, banking and bankruptcy study, under both a national and international perspective. Applicable EU law will also be examined, and broader issues regarding the function of international capital markets will be discussed, particularly in relation to project finance of complex infrastructure.

Unit aims

  • Enable students to identify various legal concepts and principles examined throughout the subject and designed to raise capital for companies and protect other related market actors affected by these kinds of strategies.
  • Enable students to apply theories and legal rules of corporate finance to practical situations.
  • Research sources of law and academic texts to identify the reasoning behind principles of corporate finance, as well as their impact on various legal provisions.
  • Enable students to confidently handle, analyse, summarise and apply the creation of the above principles.

Intended Learning Outcomes

On the completion of this unit, students will be able to demonstrate:

  • thorough knowledge and systematic understanding of various corporate finance procedures and techniques for raising capital
  • understanding of legal issues arising in the framework of the protection of lenders and borrowers
  • critical assessment of concepts related to corporate finance arguing from competing perspectives and paying particular attention to contemporary issues
  • critical appreciation of the legal procedures related to corporate finance strategies
  • ability to deal with practical issues in the area of corporate finance, to interpret, critically evaluate and re-express these in given, previously unseen, practical situations with appropriate critical comment

Teaching Information

The contact hours for this unit will be 30 hours. This will usually take the form of: 8 lectures, 10 two-hour seminars and 2 assessment preparation and feedback sessions.

Assessment Information

Summative: 2 x 3000 word essays (50% each) will assess the candidate's ability to research a topic within the scope of this unit. Both assessments will assess all of the Intended Learning Outcomes for this unit in the context of topics selected by the examiners.

Formative: students should do one formative assessment (this will usually be 1 x 1500 word essay).

Reading and References

  • Paul Davies and Sarah Worthington (eds.), Gower and Davies, Principles of Modern Company Law (Sweet & Maxwell, 9th ed., 2012).
  • Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (Oxford, OUP, 2nd ed., 2014).
    • Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Oxford, Hart Publishing, 2nd edn, 2015).
  • John Lowry and Arad Reisberg, Pettet's Company Law: Company Law and Corporate Finance (Longman, 4th ed., 2012).
  • Dan Prentice and Arad Reisberg (ed.) Corporate Finance Law in the UK and EU (Oxford, OUP, 2011).
  • Pierre Schammo, EU Prospectus Law: New Perspectives on Regulatory Competition in Securities Markets (Cambridge, CUP, 2011).
  • Graham Vinter, Gareth Price and David Lee, Project Finance (Sweet & Maxwell, 4th ed., 2013).
  • The course is primarily designed around Gullifer and Payne's excellent 2nd edition. Thus, this is the primary reading material.

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