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Professor Murray teaches business law, business ethics, and alternative dispute resolution courses to undergraduate and graduate students. Currently, his research focuses on corporate governance, mergers & acquisitions, sports law, and social entrepreneurship law issues.

Professor Murray is the 2018-19 President of the Southeastern Academy of Legal Studies in Business (“SEALSB”) and is a co-editor of the Business Law Professor Blog. His articles have been published in a variety of journals, including the American Business Law Journal, the Delaware Journal of Corporate Law, the Harvard Business Law Review, and the Maryland Law Review. Read More

Yesterday, a new paper by Cecilia Caglio, Jennifer Dlugosz, and Marcelo Rezende – all affiliated with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System – posted on SSRN, Flight to Safety in the Regional Bank Crisis of 2023.  It’s obviously an incredibly timely piece.  Here’s the Abstract:

“Using weekly confidential data from U.S. banks, we document an unprecedented flight to safety of deposits from regional banks towards large banks in the early 2023. We show that large banks experienced large deposit inflows relative to small and regional banks and that these differences remain substantial if we account for bank characteristics associated with bank failures over this crisis, including liquidation values and shares of uninsured deposits. Large banks lowered deposit rates relative to other banks during the crisis, supporting the hypothesis that deposits flew to these banks because they are considered safer.”   

Dear BLPB Readers:

The American Business Law Journal invites ALSB members who are interested in serving on the Editorial Board of the ABLJ to apply for the position of Articles Editor. The ABLJ is widely regarded, nationally and internationally, as a premier peer-reviewed journal. Serving as an Articles Editor provides an opportunity to serve the Academy of Legal Studies in Business and broader academic discipline at the highest levels of service. 

The incoming Articles Editor will begin to serve on the Board in August 2023. Board members commit to serve for three years: two years as Articles Editor and one year as Senior Articles Editor. After that, Articles Editors have the option of continuing to serve two more years—one as Managing Editor and another as Editor-in-Chief. Articles Editors supervise the review of articles that have been submitted to the ABLJ to determine which manuscripts to recommend for publication. If a manuscript is accepted, the Articles Editor is responsible for working with the author to oversee changes in both style and substance. If a manuscript is believed to be publishable but in need of further work, the Articles Editor outlines specific revisions and further lines of research that the author should pursue. The Articles Editor’s recommendations for works-in-progress are perhaps the most important and creative aspect of the job because they provide the guidance necessary for works

My last post (here) addressed central bank digital currencies (CBDC).  I wanted to address this topic again today (and will do so again in the future!).  Michelle W. Bowman, a Member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, recently gave a speech entitled, Considerations for a Central Bank Digital Currency.  She states “There are two threshold questions that a policymaker needs to ask before any decision to move forward with a CBDC. First, what problem is the policymaker trying to solve, and is a CBDC a potential solution? Second, what features and considerations–including unintended consequences–may a policymaker want to consider in deciding to design and adopt a CBDC?” 

Governor Bowman notes that “a CBDC is simply a new form of digital liability of a central bank…Beyond this baseline definition though, “what is a CBDC” defies a simple definition.”  There is “an array of CBDC design choices” and “policy tradeoffs that this multitude of choices presents.”

One of the policy tradeoffs related to design features that Governor Bowman addresses is privacy considerations. She states that “In thinking about the implications of CBDC and privacy, we must also consider the central role that money plays in

Last week, I posted (here) about an important new article on the Fed and I’m doing that again this week.  Wharton Professor Christina Parajon Skinner’s Central Bank Digital Currency as New Public Money (forthcoming, University of Pennsylvania Law Review) is also a critical piece.  As the Introduction explains: “nearly every central bank around the world” is considering whether to create a central bank digital currency (CBDC).  Most payments are already digital.  Hence, it is important to realize that the impact of a central bank digital currency would be more than just payment digitization. 

Skinner states that “At least in the case of a U.S.-dollar CBDC, issued by the Federal Reserve, not only is a CBDC a fundamentally new monetary instrument, it also fundamentally alters – by weakening – the bundle of rights that State-issued money has heretofore conveyed to individuals holding public money.” (p. 9-10) And that “In many ways, as this Article will suggest, the nature of money implicates the very relationship between people and the State. In that sense, each nation’s decision about whether to pursue a CBDC will be highly dependent on its legal framework but also its political-economy values. Some States may well

I’ve often blogged (for example, here and here) about the monumental importance of a seemingly mundane topic: access to a master account at the Federal Reserve.  So, I was delighted to read Professor Julie Anderson Hill’s new article, From Cannabis to Crypto: Federal Reserve Discretion in Payments (forthcoming, Iowa Law Review).  It’s an important piece about a critical issue.  Here’s the abstract:

“From its inception, the Federal Reserve has operated payment systems that let banks move money for their customers. Checks, wire transfers, and electronic consumer payments all happen thanks to the Federal Reserve. Congress by statute specified which banks get access to the Fed’s payment services. For more than a century, the Federal Reserve provided services to all legally eligible banks. But when the Federal Reserve received requests for payments access from a cannabis-focused credit union and a cryptocurrency custody bank (both of whom are legally eligible), it denied them. The Fed also issued sweeping guidelines claiming discretion to conduct risk-vetting and deny bank requests. These guidelines apply to all banks and reverberate far beyond cannabis and crypto.

This Article examines whether the Federal Reserve’s payments discretion is as great as it now claims—a question that has been

Dear BLPB Readers:

My colleague Professor Joseph Thai  at OU College of Law shared the following:

“Do you have an interest in securities fraud and investor protection? Want to ask national experts about the current banking crisis and its implications for regulators, investors, and the general public?

On behalf of OU College of Law, please join us for the Wilkinson Family Speaker Series (WFSS) in the Bell Courtroom at OU College of Law on Friday, March 24, 2023, from 9:15 a.m. – 1:15 p.m. The event is free, breakfast and lunch are included, and you are welcome to come and go if you cannot stay the entire duration.

Please see the flyer and attached program, and RSVP at the link below. Thank you!”

Program flyer is here: Download WSS Program

RSVP here

This week, I read Professor Ganesh Sitaraman’s fascinating article, Deplatforming (forthcoming, Yale Law Journal).  As he states in the introduction, “Deplatforming has also not been limited to individuals and content on social media.”  My research isn’t focused on tech platforms or social media.  However, it does encompass banking, financial market infrastructures, and other evolving financial market platforms where this issue either has arisen or might arise in the future.  I’m grateful that this article will help me in thinking about such questions.  Here’s the abstract:

Deplatforming in the tech sector is hotly debated, and at times, it might even seem unprecedented. In recent years, scholars, commentators, jurists, and lawmakers have focused on the possibility of treating social media platforms as common carriers or public utilities, with the implication that imposing a duty to serve the public would restrict them from deplatforming individuals and content.

But in American law, the duty to serve all comers was never absolute. In fact, the question of whether and how to deplatform—to exclude content, individuals, or businesses from critical services—has been utterly common and regularly debated throughout American history. In the common law and the major infrastructural and utility sectors—transportation, communications, energy, and banking—American

Today, a LexisNexis alert shared the great news that Professor Nizan Geslevich Packin’s article, Financial Inclusion Gone Wrong: Securities and Crypto Assets Trading for Children, has now been published in the Hastings Law Journal.  It’s a fascinating work that I had the privilege of seeing presented at last year’s National Business Law Scholars Conference (NBLSC) at OU Law.  I’m excited to see it’s now published, and I can’t wait to learn about more exceptional work like this at this year’s NBLSC in Knoxville, Tennessee.  Hope to see many of you there! 

Article citation: Nizan Geslevich Packin, Financial Inclusion Gone Wrong: Securities and Cypto Assets Trading for Children, 74 Hastings L. J. 349 (2023). 

Here’s the abstract posted on SSRN:

According to studies, for most Americans, money is a major source of anxiety. Looking for ways to help Americans address this source of anxiety, some believe that increasing children’s financial orientation could help lower their money-related anxiety levels as adults. Identifying this market as a business opportunity, and reassured by research that shows that by age six, children are already veteran consumers of mobile apps, financial technology (FinTech), decentralized finance (DeFi) and even traditional financial entities have started

Warning: this post addresses suicide.

I was supposed to post yesterday about a different topic but I’m posting today and not next week because someone needs to read this today.

Maybe it’s you. Maybe it’s your “strong” friend or colleague.

I found out yesterday that I lost a former student to suicide. She lit up every room she walked into and inspired me, her classmates, and everyone she met. I had no idea she was living in such darkness. Lawyers, law students, compliance professionals, and others in high stress roles are conditioned to be on top of everything. We are the strong ones that clients and colleagues rely on. We worry so much about the stigma of not being completely in control at all times, that we don’t get help. We worry that clients won’t trust us with sensitive or important matters. We worry that we won’t pass the character and fitness assessments to get admitted to the bar. 

The CDC released a report this week showing an alarming rise in depression, suicidal thoughts, and anxiety among our youth. The report noted that:

  • Female students and LGBQ+ students are experiencing alarming rates of violence, poor mental health, and suicidal thoughts