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  • More than 50% of Citigroup’s corporate and investment banking revenues come from outside north America, so emerging markets are the cornerstone of its success or failure. It already dominates some areas but can it blow the competition away in every product and in every region? Sudip Roy reports.
  • Increasing regulatory and governance pressures for more direct control and accountability of treasury processes has changed the relationship between corporates and their bank partners.
  • A former FX salesman at JPMorgan Chase in New York has been arrested and charged with wire fraud. Terrence Gumbs apparently hid an unauthorized trade, which cost the bank about $6 million in losses, according to a criminal complaint unsealed in New York.
  • Second-lien financings grew dramatically in 2005. Total US second-lien loan issuance alone amounted to more than $22 billion in 2005. In Europe, second-lien issuance totalled €5.75 billion in 2005, rising from €1.88 billion in 2004.
  • In December 2001, the government defaulted on $81.8 billion of debt repayments and broke the peso’s link with the dollar. When Nielsen was appointed in May 2002, the country was in the midst of one of the worst financial, social and political crises to hit any country since the Great Depression. His job, together with that of his economy minister, Roberto Lavagna, was to help restore stability and turn around Argentina’s financial fortunes.
  • To obtain the overall country risk score, Euromoney assigns a weighting to nine categories. These are political risk (25% weighting), economic performance (25%), debt indicators (10%), debt in default or rescheduled (10%), credit ratings (10%), access to bank finance (5%), access to short-term finance (5%), access to capital markets (5%), forfaiting (5%).
  • In last month's edition of Euromoney we published an article on page 10 headed "Is Deutsche's CDO business out of control?" which referred to Mark Stainton, Deutsche's successful former Head of CDO trading. Some readers may have thought that the article suggested that there was a link between Mark Stainton's departure from Deutsche to go to Citadel and an alleged overstatement of profits by Deutsche's trader Anshul Rustagi, whose dismissal from Deutsche Bank is currently subject to appeal.
  • Inside Argentina’s financial crisis | Why Lavagna was the only man for the job | The fall and rise of Argentina
  • Thai capital markets are set for a bull run. SCB's president, Khunying Jada Watthanasiritham, expains how her bank, and other local firms, can profit despite growing interest from international banks.
  • LBOs and technicals have boosted betting on the continuing steepness of the European credit curve. But nothing good lasts for ever and several things could upset the apple cart.
  • The market is attractive to potential foreign acquirers, but the process of acquisition is proving far from easy. Patrick Gill reports.
  • Supply of both Islamic-compliant and conventional instruments has so far failed to keep up with the voracious levels of demand across the Middle East, but there are signs that product-starved investors might now begin to see a steadier flow, though far-reaching challenges remain. Kathryn Wells reports.