Euromoney Limited, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 15236090
4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX
Copyright © Euromoney Limited 2024
Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Search results for

Tip: Use operators exact match "", AND, OR to customise your search. You can use them separately or you can combine them to find specific content.
There are 39,652 results that match your search.39,652 results
  • Best bank - Raffeisenbank
  • Best bank - Banca Comerciala Romana
  • Best bank - BPH PBK
  • Best bank
  • Best bank
  • Best debt house Deutsche Bank
  • UBOMIR MINCHEV, EXECUTIVE director of mobile telephone software company Telelink, is one of the new breed of Bulgarian entrepreneurs. Like many of the country's leading politicians and businessmen, Minchev is a former investment banker. He set up Telelink only two years ago and has seen it grow to a point where it employs more than 100 people. Most of them are young and all but a handful have university degrees.
  • Bulgaria's finance minister, Milen Velchev, has an impressive record. His country's economic fundamentals are far better than those of many in central and eastern Europe. But the population hasn't got the feel-good factor.
  • Nikolay Vassilev, Bulgaria's deputy prime minister and economy minister, rushes back into his office shortly after midnight on a Friday, having been locked in meetings all day. His dinner is a McDonald's hamburger and chips, forced down as he begins yet another meeting. Bulgaria makes very different demands to those Vassilev faced when he was a London-based investment banker. However, he remains enthusiastic.
  • Recently a headhunter approached a member of the fixed-income department of a leading international bank to try to recruit him for a rival. The candidate, intrigued by the sound of the job, decided to pursue the matter. But it soon turned out that the hiring bank was the very one he had walked out of just months before.
  • Source: www.breakingviews.com is Europe's leading financial commentary service
  • You've got to take your hat off to General Motors. At the end of last month the embattled US auto company raised about $47 billion. The banks stumped up $29.5 billion in syndicated loans, bond market investors handed over $13.5 billion, and a $4 billion convertible bond accounted for the rest. Proceeds from the bonds and convertibles were explicitly earmarked for sorting out GM's pension fund liabilities.