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LATEST ARTICLES
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The asset manager has decided to pull investment from firms that don’t make sufficient progress on ESG disclosure while it routinely votes against climate-related shareholder resolutions itself.
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European regulators aren’t done with capital increases, especially for banks with unjustifiably low risk weightings.
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The year 2020 is going to be a big one in the world of failed trades.
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The needle may slowly be moving, but if we continue at this pace sustainable finance will still be a niche rather than integrated into all finance by the end of the century.
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The US firm is cutting just under 2% of its workforce, a reflection of what could be coming in 2020.
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It appears that basic errors rather than deliberate attempts to game the system lay behind Citi’s large miscalculations of UK RWAs and CET1.
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It seems the Australian banking scandal has caught up with Westpac.
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The country’s positive real interest rates shine like a beacon for international banks.
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The country’s Supreme Court overturns a curveball decision from July, to the benefit of distressed debt investors.
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Santander targets US retail deposits, as Goldman's Marcus finds online lending tougher than expected.
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The benefit of banking digitally is that customers have an immediate record of their spending, but they don't want an app that judges them at the same time.
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The ridesharing company’s foray into financial services is a questionable decision given the company’s dismal financial results.
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While the IMF highlights mispriced corporate debt as a systemic danger, so too is misvalued unlisted equity.
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Brazil should be careful of learning the wrong lessons from Chilean protests.
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Life goes on, but with extra security, incongruous graffiti and smashed ATMs.
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Why it doesn’t make sense that economic theory has kept natural capital as an externality.
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It was just what the regulators didn’t want: another surge in Sofr just as the timetable for transition away from US dollar Libor enters its critical phase.
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Deutsche Bank has taken the radical step of getting rid of its equities business, but thinks it can still offer ECM. Can it?
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Investors fearful of higher geopolitical risk and lower economic growth may be making a mistake if they consider private assets as the best way to generate returns.
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It might not happen, but if the US president were to stop Asian firms listing in the US, it would help a sector that has watched business slip through its fingers.
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Three-quarters of fund managers that responded to a recent Bank of America Merrill Lynch survey think that Mexico is going to lose its investment grade status.
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For those that work on them, every edition of Euromoney is special. We try our utmost to reflect the issues of the moment, to delve into the intricacies of the global financial system and never forget that our duty is both to inform and to entertain.
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Germany is famous for its engineering and infamous for its banks – but how does a $4 trillion economy get by with only one battered global systemically important bank? And is the answer also the problem or an example to follow?
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Europe’s banking sector’s investment in fintech and ESG merits more confidence than their exposure to negative European Central Bank rates might suggest. On these counts, the US banks may be lagging.
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Clubby governance structures in the EU are obstructing the fight against money laundering.
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Once a global wealth management (WM) powerhouse, DBWM no longer sits in the top 10 when it comes to AuM or stature.
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To date, the transformation of financial services through new technology has been a success story, but regulators are becoming more nervous.