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  • Stephen Jones joins Lovells in February as a partner in the corporate practice area. Jones will be based in London, and will focus on the development of the corporate finance practice in Central and Eastern Europe.
  • IR Global is launching a new service to assist listed companies in managing their relationships with international institutional shareholders more effectively.
  • Financial experts are being asked to join internal audit committees to stop any repeat of the Parmalat debacle occurring in the UK, say the interim management specialists Executives Online. A recent corporate governance code published by the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) stipulates that one member of the audit committee must have recent and relevant financial experience.
  • Corporate Finance is compiling its first annual survey on the international debt capital markets and invites you to contribute your views as borrowers. This is your opportunity to critically assess current trends in the market and the banks you use.
  • Bank of America has named Christiane Mandell as the head of global foreign exchange for the company's global FX group, based in New York. Mandell gains the post following the recent merger between BoA and FleetBoston Financial. Mandell was formerly head of investor client management for equities and debt and will now report to Jonathan Moulds, head of liquid products at BoA.
  • In March the European Commission plans to put forward specific proposals to improve auditing and corporate governance. While it may look like the Commission is reacting quickly after the Parmalat scandal, it actually began work last May, in response to US corporate scandals and the EU's single market, which has increased cross border corporate activity.
  • The positive economic noises emanating from the emerging markets have been confirmed this week in a report by S&Ps which shows a second consecutive quarter of improvements in corporate upgrades.
  • 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.