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  • Macro-conjecture-on-a-fast-moving-story alert: no one knows how the Cyprus bailout will play out. However, dismissing its impact, citing the small size of the economy, misses the point: the damage to market psychology and the EU's institutional architecture is very real.
  • Once seasonal rouble demand for tax payments has passed later this month, the currency should suffer, given Russia’s close links to Cyprus.
  • Little more than a week after Mervyn King, governor of the Bank of England (BoE), performed an about turn on the benefits of sterling weakness, more members of the central bank’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) have issued a warning over weakness in the currency.
  • The over-capacity and over-investment problem in China is concentrated in low-end manufacturing businesses and sectors that experienced a massive boom during the last decade. Conversely, public infrastructure is grossly inadequate to accommodate further urbanization, according to BCA Research.
  • Euromoney columnist Jon Macaskill imagines how Doug L Braunstein, the former chief financial officer of JPMorgan, chronicled his testimony at last week's Senate hearing.
  • With the Single Euro Payments Area (Sepa) migration deadline less than a year away, Martin Schlageter, head of treasury operations at Roche, the Swiss healthcare giant, shares his insights on the migration process.
  • Photo from Spanish satirical weekly magazine rightly or wrongly nails the populist view on Germany's role in Cyprus.
  • The proposed raid on insured depositors in Cyprus threatens a wave of unintended consequences for the eurozone's stability in the long-term and throws into sharp relief the political fragmentation at the heart of the EU, say hawkish analysts, bucking the largely sanguine sell-side consensus. Irrespective of the final terms of any bailout, the damage has already been done by breaking taboos.
  • Amid political pressure to reduce cannabis-related crime, the legalization of the drug for medical usage could create a $40 billion industry in the US alone, opening up new investment opportunities – with Portugal, Spain, Israel, Czech Republic and Canada also on the radar for venture capitalists. Some even describe the opportunity as a new form of social-impact investing.
  • Investors are not well paid for the level of sovereign risk in the UK or France, according to BCA Research.
  • With Latvia set to join the eurozone in 2014, and Moody's upgrading its bond rating this week, finance minister Andris Vilks is confident of the benefits to the country in joining the single currency – and aware of the efforts needed to convince a sceptical population.
  • The Cyprus bailout crisis lays bare the clear need for an EU banking union. Nevertheless, the eurozone’s single market will remain incomplete in the likely absence of an EU-wide common deposit scheme, with the solvency of national deposit guarantee schemes irrevocably tied to that of the sovereign.