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  • During the 1990s central European countries were taught that patience, self-discipline and the narrow road to convergence was the only way to qualify for Emu membership. It was a sign of progress when increased confidence in local currencies drove dollars and Deutschmarks off the streets of Prague, Budapest and Warsaw. That's what the European Central Bank wants them to believe. But the Czechs and Croatians now suspect that by dumping their own currencies for the euro straightaway, they can take a short cut into Emu. The ECB is desperately looking for a way to stop them. Laura Covill reports.
  • E-Force One glides into the Gare du Midi, Brussels. The band strikes up buongiorno il duce and Prodi emerges from the presidential train, glowing from his triumph at the G3 summit in Bruges.
  • There are a record number of equity offerings in the pipeline for the rest of 1999. That may seem like good news for equity capital markets bankers. But with Y2K likely to close the market early this year those deals will have to squeeze through a narrow window. Even more worrying, this year has seen a surprising number of deals turn sour. Which of the deals in the pipeline is likely to turn rotten? And which firms will be left celebrating the successes? Michael Peterson reports.
  • Keeping faith from bust to boom
  • Doubling shareholder value every three years is an objective set in stone for UK bank Lloyds TSB. The trouble is, the more money it makes ­ it's phenomenally profitable for a mature-market bank ­ the harder it is to put it to work. But there's no sign that it's run out of ideas. Jules Stewart reports.
  • Keeping faith from bust to boom
  • The amorphous sector challenge
  • Riding the high yielders
  • When the president gets tied down
  • When the president gets tied down
  • When the president gets tied down
  • When the president gets tied down