The National Law Review is proud to support the American Bar Association Business Law Section, the ABA Center for Continuing Legal Education, and the Morin Center for Banking and Financial Law of Boston University School of Law‘s two-and-one-half day primer on banking law. If you need the basics, you can’t afford to miss this program. Attendance is limited.
Attend this program and learn what you need to know about:
· Who regulates whom, why and how
· The structure and intent of bank regulation
· The impact of Gramm-Leach-Bliley and Dodd-Frank
· The role of capital
· Prudential limitations
· Permitted investments and activities of banks, bank holding companies and financial holding companies
· Insurance, securities and capital market activities of banks and bank affiliates
· Geographic expansion and mergers and acquisitions
· Supervision and enforcement
· Failing banks and actions against affiliated persons
This fundamental banking law course was developed to provide practitioners with an understanding of the basic laws and regulations governing banks and bank holding companies. This course is a comprehensive introduction to banking law regulation for attorneys, consultants, and bank professionals who intend to work in the field. It is also a refresher course for experienced banking law practitioners whose practice has not provided an opportunity for the broad exposure that this course offers. This course includes a two-hour segment on ethical considerations in the representation of banking organizations.
Date: | October 27 — 29 2010 |
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Location: | Boston University School of Management Fl 4 – Executive Leadership Ctr 595 Commonwealth Ave Boston, MA 02215-1704 USA |
Requested CLE Credit: | 18.50 |
For More Information and to Register: Click Here.