LLAW6088 / JDOC6088

General Course Information

1.1 Course details

Course code: LLAW6088 / JDOC6088
Course name: Derivatives: Law and Regulation
Programme offered under: LLM Programme / JD Programme
Semester: First
Designated research course: No
Specialization: Commercial, corporate and financial law
Prerequisites No
Credit point value: 9 credits / 6 credits

1.2 Course description

This course is a pioneering financial derivatives course, taught by leading practitioners in the field. The course aims to give students a working knowledge of financial derivatives and structured products as used in the financial markets in Hong Kong and globally and of the key legal and regulatory concepts and documentation involved, which will be useful to them in their future professional life as commercial or finance lawyers. While looking at the evolving legal and regulatory issues arising from the derivatives market, the course will primarily focus on the private law (English and Hong Kong) aspects of cross-border derivatives transactions.

The course will be liberally illustrated with real life case studies of the uses (and abuses) of derivatives, drawn primarily from the practice experience of the presenters, and will include practical exercises in the documentation of transactions using the ISDA documentation suite.

1.3 Course teachers

Name E-mail address Office Consultation
Course convenor Andrew Malcolm andrew.malcolm@linklaters.com N/A By email
Course convenor I-Ping Soong TBA N/A By email

1.4 Course Outline (for elective course)

Please click the link here for the course outline (HKU Portal login required).

Learning Outcomes

2.1 Course Learning Outcomes (CLOs) for this course

CLO 1 Demonstrate an understanding of the derivatives market and its key players and features.

CLO 2 Demonstrate familiarity with the structure and key components of the ISDA Documentation suite (including the 2002 Master Agreement and credit support documents).

CLO 3 Analyse the legal principles, regulatory regime and evolving legal and regulatory issues arising from the derivatives market with a focus on private law aspects of cross-border derivative transactions.

CLO 4 Apply the law and knowledge acquired from this course to critically analyse the legal and regulatory risks of the relevant products and documentation.

CLO 5 Describe, explain, differentiate and illustrate typical uses of the key derivative products.

2.2 LLM and JD Programme Learning Outcomes (PLOs)

Please refer to the following link:

LLM – https://course.law.hku.hk/llm-plo/

JD – https://course.law.hku.hk/jd-plo/

2.3 Programme Learning Outcomes to be achieved in this course

PLO A PLO B PLO C PLO D PLO E PLO F
CLO 1
CLO 2
CLO 3
CLO 4

Assessment(s)

3.1 Assessment Summary

Assessment task Weighting Feedback method* Course learning outcomes
Class participation 20% 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
Take home exam 80% 1 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
*Feedback method (to be determined by course teacher)
1 A general course report to be disseminated through Moodle
2 Individual feedback to be disseminated by email / through Moodle
3 Individual review meeting upon appointment
4 Group review meeting
5 In-class verbal feedback

3.2 Assessment Detail

To be advised by course convenor(s). See also Course Outline above.

3.3 Grading Criteria

Please refer to the following link: https://www.law.hku.hk/_files/law_programme_grade_descriptors.pdf

Learning Activities

4.1 Learning Activity Plan

Seminar: 3 hours / week for 12 teaching weeks
Private study time: 9.5 hours / week for 12 teaching weeks

Remarks: the normative student study load per credit unit is 25 ± 5 hours (ie. 150 ± 30 hours for a 6-credit course), which includes all learning activities and experiences within and outside of classroom, and any assessment task and examinations and associated preparations.

4.2 Details of Learning Activities

The course will be presented in weekly seminars. Practical exercises are included and student participation is encouraged.

Learning Resources

5.1 Resources

Reading materials: Reading materials are posted on Moodle
Core reading list: Hong Kong Derivatives Law and Practice, Liew and Soong
Recommended reading list: Posted to Moodle each week by topic
Use of AI tools It is understood that students may wish to make appropriate use of AI tools as study aids. Students should be aware, however, that in this field and in the course convenors’ personal and professional experience, AI tools are particularly prone to hallucinate, sometimes egregiously. All AI output should be carefully checked: this is absolutely essential in professional practice.

5.2 Links

Please refer to the following link: http://www.law.hku.hk/course/learning-resources/