July 2009
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LATEST ARTICLES
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Of the few global banks to have survived without state assistance, HSBC is the best positioned in the most attractive emerging economies. Its global banking and markets business is thriving. Its rights issue confirmed it as a better credit than many governments, and deposits have flooded in. Regulators will force other banks to copy it. Best of all, it has admitted its mistakes. Peter Lee reports.
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HSBC and Credit Suisse win top honours in Euromoney Awards for Excellence; Ackermann receives Lifetime Achievement Award for Outstanding Contribution to Financial Markets
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Brady Dougan and Paul Calello stripped down Credit Suisse’s investment banking vehicle as the credit crisis hit. Now they’re showing off a streamlined, non-polluting, yet powerful firm that even their competitors admire. Is Credit Suisse the model of a new investment bank? Clive Horwood reports.
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Officials from the Gulf Cooperation Council have set 2013 as the new deadline for the region’s common currency, according to Standard Chartered, quoting local media reports. The initial deadline for the project was 2010 but progress has been slow and complex, with both Oman and the UAE pulling out of the union. Despite this, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia have decided to go ahead. But Standard Chartered says that even if the union is effected, excluding the UAE means the region’s second-largest and most diversified economy will be outside it.
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FX retail leader might look offshore; Regulators’ moves “may not help investors”
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Saxo Bank has purchased stakes in two specialist asset managers, taking the entire share capital of Capital Four Management and 51% of Global Evolution.
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Time won’t solve problems; Transparency is paramount
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The retiring chairman of Rabobank urges a new model of bank ownership; The view from a survivor is that the worst may be to come
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$16 billion in Reit offerings have been made in Q2; Reits eye distressed debt opportunities
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Lenient treatment of property assets acquired in debt-for-equity swaps shows regulators are still worried by systemic vulnerabilities.
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Steady supply for three months shows market is back; Sub-investment-grade names welcomed
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Fortis acquisition gives unprecedented scale; Organic growth continues in France, Italy
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Equity derivatives dealers responding to difficult trading environment; New products to cope with volatility and counterparty risk
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Corporate, not real estate, is key; White Tower teeters on the brink
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IMF credit line brings into question robustness of country’s economy.
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There is a group of investors who don’t feel comfortable unless there’s a benchmark to use. So clearly there’s a need for indices that measure movements in FX.
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US bank consolidation is hanging fire; Will private equity firms jumpstart the market?
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Emerging markets companies buying western assets must heed the lessons of Cemex and Tata Motors.
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BofA president bullish on prospects; Firm maintains top three revenue slot
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Roberto Isolani, co-head of global capital markets at UBS, is to leave the bank this summer. Isolani spent just over two years in London after he was recalled from Italy to run debt capital markets. He is a 17-year veteran of UBS who was elevated to co-head of capital markets alongside Matthew Koder just over a year ago when the troubled Swiss bank merged ECM and DCM.
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Financial troubles are plaguing some of the Gulf’s most prominent families.
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Boutique investment bank expanding in fixed-income trading; Plans origination expansion and a push into Europe
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Selling BGI removes restrictions on Barclays Capital; The firm can now deal with US mutual and pension funds
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Firm’s role in AIA offering shows it is a player to reckon with in the region.
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Aedy begins to build team; Restructuring opportunities top of agenda
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The CDS market is hoping that the move to central clearing will silence its critics. It could be disappointed.
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Goldman Sachs has always set itself apart. And that goes for its people as well as its business. Somehow Goldman bankers just look different and sound different to those at other shops and are clearly worth protecting.
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Big overseas holders of US dollar assets, with China at the forefront, will not be sold another pup. Instead of supporting wayward US financial policies they will increasingly diversify to other currencies.
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Dramatic fall in growth; Bankruptcy looms without bailout funds