The Limits of Lawyering: Legal Opinions in Structured Finance
Author(s) -
Steven L. Schwarcz
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.657521
Subject(s) - structured finance , business , political science , economics , financial crisis , macroeconomics
Significant controversy surrounds the issuance of legal opinions in structured finance transactions, particularly where accountants separately use these opinions, beyond their traditional primary use, for determining whether to characterize the transactions as debt. Reflecting at its core the unresolved boundaries between public and private in financial transactions, this controversy raises important issues of first impression: To what extent, for example, should lawyers be able to issue legal opinions that create negative externalities? Furthermore, what should differentiate the roles of lawyers and accountants in disclosing information to investors? Resolution of these issues not only helps to demystify the mystique, and untangle the morass, of legal-opinion giving but also affects the very viability of the securitization industry, which dominates American, and increasingly global, financing. In a vital area of finance, lawyers increasingly are being criticized 3 and sometimes threatened with liability 4 for issuing traditionally-required legal opinion letters. 5 Although their
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