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  • It’s so simple it almost sounds trite but knowing corporate treasurers’ demands in terms of products and solutions – as well as how these are delivered – remains the only way transaction banks can stay ahead of the game. Euromoney surveys the treasurer wish list.
  • The euro has remained resilient amid the turmoil that has engulfed the financial markets in recent weeks, but its fortunes might be starting to turn.
  • The impact on corporates from rising US yields is mixed as contradictory forces collide: an improving economic climate and prospect of higher market rates suggests corporates should run down their cash balances to invest, but volatility and structural shifts in liquidity management practices suggest this might not happen any time soon.
  • Euromoney Country Risk
    Economists saw rising levels of country risk among Asian sovereigns in June as investors fled emerging market debt and equity markets, after the US Federal Reserve announced it will unwind its policy of quantitative easing (QE).
  • Fears are starting to escalate that China’s heated financial sector is about to reach boiling point.
  • A wave of protests over a wide range of political and economic grievances has rocked Brazil, despite the fruits of its decade-long commodity-driven growth having been more evenly shared than other producers. The macroeconomic consequences could be more severe than markets expect, as it heaps on the risk of fiscal laxity and reduces prospects for structural reform, say analysts.
  • Whether there is a serious liquidity shortage in the Chinese banking sector or just poor liquidity management is missing the broader point: recent outflows provide a necessary stress test for the People's Bank of China (PBoC) to assess the appetite for capital account liberalization, say analysts.
  • Agency to apply corporate rating experience to smaller firms to stimulate greater investor participation.
  • Companies need easier access to their cash across the globe as regulatory changes are expected to make borrowing more expensive. But strict rules on getting funds out of emerging markets – where many have invested heavily – are a major roadblock. Fortunately, regulatory reforms mean cash previously caught behind a country’s borders is becoming more accessible.
  • The mini liquidity crunch is the early warning sign of a substantial economic correction long overdue, amid rising leverage and a broken growth model, say bearish analysts.
  • Brazilians are coming to terms with a new economic reality: the commodity fuelled growth bonanza has run its course and living standards are failing to keep up with the government’s rhetoric on Brazil’s growth miracle. This downward adjustment in expectations is causing a major political malaise, according to BCA Research.
  • The violent synchronized sell-off in emerging market assets – across FX, local rates and credit – raises the spectre of a new normal: the end of unsustainably high foreign ownership of assets, particularly local currency credit, greater credit differentiation and the waning power of financial repression in the US as a fillip to EM flows, bearish analysts say.