"This book takes a novel approach to the area of comparative legal study by identifying eight orienting propositions that together inform the study of ""comparative law"", or as this book tends to prefer, ""comparative legal systems"". Thus, this book is not so much a recitation and summary of comparative law concepts, but rather an operational road map for approaching the area. Taken together, the eight propositions reflect certain central themes that define the area for scholars while offering practitioners and informed observers a guide for understanding and navigating the forces shaping the evolving international legal environment.
A book tailored to provide a basis for understanding the role of comparative legal study in an increasingly interconnected world."
Chapter 1 What is Corporate Finance all about? Chapter 2 Nuts and Bolts of Finance and Financial Theory Chapter 3 Genesis of the Regulatory and Legislative Environment Chapter 4 The Securities and Futures Act, Cap 289 Chapter 5 Nature and Type of Equity Chapter 6 Ownership, Transfer of Shares and Capital Maintenance Rule Chapter 7 Nature and Type of Debt Capital Chapter 8 Private Equity and Venture Capital Chapter 9 Post-IPO Capital Needs Chapter 10 Key Documents Chapter 11 Financial Crime
Basil C. Bitas has substantial practice experience in international legal and business matters, having been in-house counsel to a major multinational corporation in Lausanne, Switzerland and subsequently the Managing Partner of the Geneva office of a US law firm. The nature of his practice has involved intensive interaction with the legal systems of North America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia. The latter region became a sub-specialty of his practice, with particular focus on certain countries in both Northeast and Southeast Asia, including Japan, Korea, China and the Philippines. He is currently an international research fellow of a Hong Kong-based think tank charged with examining issues relating to regional integration and connectivity. From 2008 to 2016, he was also an Associate Professor of Law (Practice) at the Singapore Management University, where he taught Comparative Legal Systems, the Economic Analysis of Law, and Ethics and Social Responsibility. Mr Bitas holds Bachelor's degrees in History and Economics from Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, having graduated Magna cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa in 1981. He also holds a Juris Doctor degree (1987) from Georgetown University Law Center in Washington, D.C. and maintains active bar memberships in the State of New York and Washington, D.C.