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  • Meet the Don
  • Thais won't practise safe banking
  • Despondency and fear hung in the air at last year's IMF/World Bank meeting. The contrast with the prevailing mood of self-congratulation and complacency in Washington last month could scarcely be more stark. The oft-repeated view was that the worst of the emerging market crisis is past, that major emerging-market economies in Asia and Latin America are either well into recovery or poised for it and that growth in the developed economies of Europe and Japan will take the pressure off the US to be the world consumer of last resort.
  • Trawling the bottom in Europe
  • On the surface the ADR market seems to be flourishing. However, a relatively small number of big issuers account for a disproportionate amount of the market by value. Emerging-market issuers seem to be returning, though, and ADRs are increasingly being used to fund mergers & acquisitions. Luciano Mondellini reports.
  • Riding the high yielders
  • Meet the Don
  • Is there life beyond the P/E ratio?
  • Faster and more synchronised world growth is bad news for bond markets. But the prospect of accelerating growth in Europe and a slowing US economy next year points to the outperformance of US bonds vis-à-vis the EU.
  • Trawling the bottom in Europe
  • Merrill Lynch has long been tipped to become the powerhouse in Asian equities. This year's survey of international investors shows that it has reached the summit, ranking first in pan-Asian research and execution. Its large-scale regional presence is paying off as Asian markets recover. And this time the recovery is built on stronger foundations than last year's ill-fated rally, says Marcus Walker. Research by Alexa Marx
  • Fund managers knew the euro would change their world. Some boosted their stock and credit focus, others decided it was best to wait and see. Here, eight investors from Germany, France and Italy talk frankly about how they fared in 1999. Their tactics and views differ. But a frequent strand is a degree of irritation about their decisions to believe the hype about corporate bonds. Marcus Walker reports.