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January issue in PDF format Image

January issue in PDF format

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

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In the Marketplace Image

In the Marketplace

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Highlights of the latest equipment leasing news from around the country.

What's New in the Law Image

What's New in the Law

Robert W. Ihne

Highlights of the latest equipment leasing cases from around the country.

Features

In the Courts Image

In the Courts

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

In-depth analysis of a recent key case.

Business Crimes Hotline Image

Business Crimes Hotline

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

A look at recent rulings of interest.

Exposure Draft Accounting Image

Exposure Draft Accounting

Joseph Moore

Under the proposed new rules, there are no bright lines. Lessors can classify a lease transaction as either a Performance Obligation or a Partial Derecognition lease. These two products perform very differently on the balance sheet, in a way similar to the different performance of Operating leases and Direct Finance leases. Keep in mind also that the huge bulk of equipment finance transactions are smaller "cookie-cutter" deals — the amount of profit associated with them precludes the possibility of having an accountant make a classification ruling on each deal individually. The classification process must be automated. IT Systems must be able to accommodate classification rules automatically.

Features

What Goes Up Can Come Down Image

What Goes Up Can Come Down

Jodi Misher Peikin & James R. Stovall

The Dodd-Frank Act directs the Sentencing Commission to amend the Sentencing Guidelines for certain fraud offenses, just as SOX did ten years ago. Those SOX amendments led to sentences greater than under the original Guidelines Manual, and a similar result will likely follow from Dodd-Frank.

Features

Pay to Play Image

Pay to Play

Joseph F. Savage, Jr., Nicholas Pilchak & Stephen M. Hoeplinger

There is heightened scrutiny and a new regulatory regime around pay-to-play issues and public pension fund investments throughout the country.

Features

Sentencing of Individuals in FCPA Cases Image

Sentencing of Individuals in FCPA Cases

Gary Stein

The DOJ exercises virtually unlimited discretion in deciding who gets charged in FCPA cases and, for all practical purposes, in deciding the amount of the financial penalty imposed against corporate violators. But sentencing of individual defendants is ultimately a matter of judicial, not prosecutorial, discretion.

Features

The Market View Image

The Market View

Michael J. Fleming

Speed, smart speed, still wins in competition. Unfortunately, I find too many company executives are not heeding this reality when it comes to the changes in financial accounting for leases.

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