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  • If you listen to the biggest foreign exchange banks, the smaller banks are on the brink of forex oblivion. They reckon any bank with a market share of less than 3% might as well give up now. And luckily enough, most of those big firms have shiny forex outsourcing agreements that the little chaps can just step right up to and sign as soon as they do decide that they just can't compete, bless them.
  • Long Yongtu, China's former vice-minister at the finance and economy ministry and the country's chief negotiator for its entry into the WTO, might want to forget his performance at Credit Suisse First Boston's recent investment conference in Hong Kong. It could haunt him for a long time to come.
  • Sovereign debt restructuring has been hotly debated for years. Paradoxically, though, two of the elements most fought over – collective action clauses and exit consents – seem now to have been accepted with equanimity. • Felix Salmon reports
  • A restructuring of Iraq's financial obligations is arguably the most important initiative that must be undertaken in that country next to providing humanitarian assistance.
  • Bankers at the top foreign exchange banks may pretend not to care that they have not come top in Euromoney's 2003 market share rankings, or that they are not one of the top five or 10. But they do care - a lot.
  • Barclays Capital's CEO, Bob Diamond, talks to Antony Currie about his ambitions for the firm, explains why it is not delving into prop trading and why it won't be hurt by a bursting of the bond market bubble. And he reveals that one of his favourite businesses right now is equities.
  • Now that the military battle in Iraq is over, my sense is that equity markets want to go up. But I don't believe that this is the start of a new bull market. It is just the eye of the storm of the secular bear market. The bounce will eventually die down and the bear market will reassert itself. We have not seen the lows yet.
  • After years of trying to make its mark on Wall Street, Deutsche Bank is finally taking up residence there. There's only one problem - the staff don't want to go.
  • Issuer: France Telecom Size: e16 billion Bookrunners: ABN Amro Rothschild, Goldman Sachs, BNP Paribas
  • Source: www.breakingviews.com is Europe's leading financial commentary service.
  • Retail investors dismayed by the dire performance of straight equity and bond funds look to be ideal customers for hedge fund products. Some national regulators have recognized this and liberalized marketing rules. But it’s not clear that the sector can sustain mass investment. • Julie Dalla-Costa reports