What provision(s) of the securities law will probably be the basis for a class-action lawsuit by the stockholders
Probably scrty. There really isn't an abbreviation for it.
No, a deed of trust on a residence is not considered a security under the Securities Act of 1933. The act defines securities as instruments such as stocks, bonds, and investment contracts, but it does not include mortgages or other types of loans secured by real estate.
It depends on the text of the lease, but probably not. You're probably stuck with the same lease buy out provisions as you would under any other circumstances. Read your lease.
Probably, unless the provisions of your probation or the laws regarding CCW in your state forbid it.
Probably not. Most states will give provisional licenses at 16 with provisions (restrictions) expiring at age 18.
You need to discuss that with your attorney. It depends on the provisions of the contract you signed. The builder probably has the right to fix any problems.
Probably, but the grantee would take inder the same provisions set forth in the original grant. A remainderman owns a future interest in fee.
What is your concept of "small?" You should check the provisions of your agreement with this company, they DO probably retain this right.
Earthquakes tend to last seconds, not weeks. But, probably the essentials. Food, bottled water, clothing, and first-aid kits are a nice place to start.
Absolutely...and it would have substanatial effect to stockholders, suppliers, corproate bond holders and such....but depositors probably no real effect. The bank is FDIC protected and deposits are basically guaranteed by the US Government to 100K per account. And even then, deposits would have a very high claim against assets of the bank and probably get paid well ahead of stockholders and such.
One of the tools, among probably many others, is comparing the yields between conventional Treasury securities and TIPS (inflation-protected securities sold by the U.S. Treasury). This can provide a useful measure of the market's expectation of future CPI inflation. Measuring inflation expectations is important because people's expectations about inflation influence their behavior in the marketplace and, in turn, have consequences for future inflation.
Probably not; bankruptcy law generally prohibits the revocation of any license due to filing bankruptcy. However, if you're Bernie Madoff (or someone like him), that may not hold; fraudulent debts generally can't be discharged, and thus are prime targets for license revocation. (Also, if you have a securities license you may NOT be allowed to file Chapter 13; ask your attorney.)