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  • In a year in which deals of all shapes and sizes were pulled, plaudits go to all equity and bond issuers who were able to complete their deals at all. Some stars of the past - Asian project deals, Latin American corporate bonds and eastern European privatizations - barely made it to the finishing line. But one muscle-clad team of super-athletes swept the board in 1998. This was the year of the telecoms industry: from the stodgiest emerging-market monopoly to the most glamourous builder of fibre-optic networks, telecoms operators were everybody's favourite performers.
  • Whenever JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs in London manage to poach staff from each other, it usually leads to a bout of cheering and high-fives in the relevant office. No doubt much of the rivalry comes from the close proximity of their headquarters, which are less than five minutes' walk from each other near Blackfriars Bridge.
  • Partly by luck, but as much because it was well structured, well organized and guaranteed to run to deadline, Brazil's auction of the state's controlling stake in telecoms provider Telebrás was a roaring success. Michael Peterson reports on why it came out as Euromoney's privatization of the year. Also, Brian Caplen looks at other notable Latin American deals and deal-makers of the year.
  • Deals of the Year
  • It's a firm that revels in its sense of history and values its independence. What it does, it does well - clearing, mortgage bonds, niche investment banking and just a little bit of prop trading. Nick Kochan goes inside Bear Stearns and gets a verbal memo from its combative chairman "Ace" Greenberg.
  • Minos Zombanakis is a pivotal figure in the history of the Euromarket. Known in the 1970s simply as "the Greek banker" (he was reckoned to be the only one of any note on the international scene), he was a combination of financial visionary, smooth salesman and masterful self-promoter. As one rather hostile magazine article remarked about his assault on the syndicated loans market: "It was one part nerve, one part histrionics and several parts pure fluff, but it did the job."
  • Telecommunications: Ways to survive a sea of troubles
  • Poll of Polls: Warburg's excellently average performance
  • Poll of Polls: Warburg's excellently average performance
  • Asset Management: Allianz wants other people's money
  • If the systems changeover for the euro turns into chaos, then the proprietor of a greasy spoon café in the City of London might know why.