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  • An administrative law judge has ordered that a former CFO be rehired, with back pay, in a decision that is considered the first related to whistle-blower protections promised by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
  • The mutual fund crisis in the US is affecting corporates as a recent survey by Finance Executives International (FEI) shows. Almost half of the surveyed CFOs believe funds held within their 401(k) plans are involved in the recent mutual fund scandal.
  • Regulation, historical rivalries, investor scepticism, language barriers and egos all stand in the way of large bank mergers in western Europe, where consolidation stalled at the end of the 1990s. Unless these obstacles can be overcome, leading European banks will be swallowed by US financial institutions just as soon as they have finished digesting their domestic acquisitions. Katie Martin reports.
  • Private equity exits, privatizations, and spin-offs will reinvigorate the IPO market this year, helping IPOs to account for a greater share of equity capital markets business. Deals may appear to be done faster but investors remain wary. The same can't be said for bankers when it comes to block trades. Peter Koh reports.
  • If a UK tabloid is to be believed, Coutts is about to offer Prince William (pictured, left) more than just a bank account. William ? second in line to the throne ? is considering a career with Coutts when he graduates from St Andrews University, according to the Sunday Mirror.
  • Western Europe | Emerging Europe | Latin America | North America
  • Western Europe | Emerging Europe | Asia | Latin America
  • What a coup it could have been for ABN Amro. The flying Dutchman oh so nearly snaffled the top spot on IFR's charity tombstone away from Deutsche Bank just as the Germans were sitting back to admire their victory.
  • When Moody's boosted India's rating on January 21, it added fuel to a stock market already breathless from its steep climb last year. Citing India's strong external payments position and progress on peace talks with Pakistan, the rating agency raised India's long-term foreign currency rating to investment grade; India still has a non-investment grade ratings from other agencies.
  • Managing director, art and numismatics services, UBS
  • Since 1974, political stability in Cyprus has been tarnished by continued struggles between Turkish and Greek interests. In turn, its progression as a financial centre has been halted by the perception of it as a tax haven for money of questionable origin. But in the past few years, Cyprus has had good reason to celebrate a marked departure from these images, particularly with its accession to the EU due in May.
  • On the first day of next year Turkey will stop being world champion for the number of zeros in its currency. In January the Assembly passed a law authorising the government to redenominate the lira by throwing away six zeros from the currency. The lira became bloated over decades of endemic inflation, which made every Turk a millionaire. The minimum wage is TL303 million ($230). Since 1980 the central bank has been obliged to issue new banknotes every two years.