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  • The euro is the ultimate fixed exchange rate: without currency fluctuations to take the strain of economic adjustment, the tensions in euroland will be severe. Europe's citizens will blame Emu for their troubles, argues Pedro Schwartz.
  • Asia's currencies may be worth less than they were, but in two Asian city states a new currency is on the rise - the electronic variety. As Steven Irvine reports, central bankers want to encourage e-cash but they are nervous about its implications.
  • Will Emu collapse under the weight of its own contradictions? Ian Cormack argues that it will not. Liquid bond markets and massive capital flows will create a virtuous circle unlocking the flexibility of Europe's labour markets.
  • Out goes Napoleon, in comes King Arthur as Wim Duisenberg factors in the views of his five new colleagues on the European Central Bank directorate. Whose dogma will prevail at this latter-day round table? Laura Covill reports.
  • In-house banking is out of fashion - except in Munich, where industrial colossus Siemens has set up its own financial institution. It even aims to attract outside customers. Does the company know what it is doing? And can it make any real money in banking? By Laura Covill.
  • The most important event in modern financial history is upon us. In the afternoon of December 31 the official euro conversion rate will be announced. At that moment, 11 national currencies will effectively cease to exist and core Europe will have a single currency.
  • Investors are betting the euro will be strong. But maintaining the value of the euro in the long term will bring pain. Europe isn't ready for that, argues David Roche.
  • Edited by Steven Irvine
  • Overgrown and full of deadwood
  • Size is a well-known impediment to fund-management sprightliness and profitability. As traditional institutional investors leap belatedly on the bandwagon, that's become as true of hedge funds as of staider operations. The likely outcome: significantly declining returns. By Mike Steinberger.
  • Western lawyers and financiers have laboured hard and long to achieve Middle Eastern financings which comply with Islamic law. A recent legal innovation may hold the key.
  • Overgrown and full of deadwood