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  • Issuance of ADRs by global corporates in 2003 has shown a marked improvement across a number of ranges compared to the 2002 figures. Trading share volume, value of shares traded and capital raisings have all increased in the past year, according to research from the Bank of New York.
  • Business leaders have gone off Britain joining the euro, according to the latest MORI captains of industry survey.
  • Just days after John Rutherford, chairman and CEO of Moody’s, preached his views on the need for financial reform in China, S&Ps has released its own verdict on the state of the world’s most vigorous economy.
  • Moody's chairman and CEO John Rutherfurd Jr. expects China to continue growing quickly, while financial sector reform will have a crucial part in promoting the country's development and modernization.
  • William McDonough, chairman of The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, told reporters at The Economic Club of Washington’s Winter Luncheon Meeting on Wednesday that hundreds of public companies still owe the Board dues. "Those companies that have not paid cannot get a clean opinion from their auditor," says McDonough.
  • Europe’s corporates are lagging behind their US counterparts when it comes to competing in the global marketplace due to a lack of political and economic co-operation, according to a report issued by KPMG.
  • The good news, according to S&Ps chief economist David Wyss, is that the global economic recession wasn’t really much of a recession at all. The bad news, however, is that the global recovery isn’t really much to be get excited about, either.
  • In the name of transparency, liquidity and, paradoxically, fair pricing for investors, the current draft of the EU's revised Investment Services Directive threatens to undermine investment banks' internalized securities trading. Ian Mackenzie reports.
  • The culture of corporate bonding has taken hold in the UK. Off-sites, golf tournaments, tank-driving weekends, group hugs - they're all about learning to love your co-workers, and in doing so make your office a more harmonious, and profitable, place.
  • Foreign investors with their eyes fixed on Russia's continued powerful economic growth are shrugging off the recent arrest of Mikhail Khodorkovsky. The CEO of oil giant Yukos and Russia's richest man, he was pulled in on October 25 by Kalashnikov-toting officers of the FSB (federal securities services). This might have briefly unsettled the stock market, but foreign companies selling soap and coffee to increasingly affluent Russian consumers believe their businesses will be unaffected.
  • Permal, part of French group Worms & Cie, announced last month that it had launched its first Islamic hedge fund.