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Business travel poll 1998: A hard landing in Asia
Flush with optimism, Asia's airlines ordered new aircraft worth billions of dollars. Then came the crisis. Companies are cutting back on business travel, tourists are staying at home - and the airlines still have to service their debts. Hotel chains, tour operators and the world's big aircraft manufacturers are suffering too. Chris Wright reports.
April 01, 1998
Opinion
Get a life
Citicafe is no ordinary bank cafeteria. "The old place was so drab," says Sunil Sreenivasan, chief executive of Citibank Malaysia. "I told the architect I wanted something equal to or better than where the kids go."
April 01, 1998
India: Testing the takeover code
Indian companies lack predatory instincts. But in March they discovered a mean streak. A rash of hostile takeover bids - the worst in India - has perked up a dull stock market. These events will, in the coming weeks, test the new takeover code put in place by the Securities Exchange Board of India (SEBI) in February even as the code itself is being challenged in Indian courts.
April 01, 1998
A SUPPLEMENT TO EUROMONEY/APRIL 1998: EASTERN EUROPE
Reshaping the future
April 01, 1998
Kiev's cut-price face-lift
Strapped for the cash to build international-style hotels, the Ukraine government is sprucing up its Soviet-era buildings and housing EBRD delegates on boats instead. But the real difficulty will be creating a service culture in time for the conference. Suzanne Miller reports
April 01, 1998
Ukraine steps close to the precipice
What country would be desperate enough to issue a Eurobond with a yield of more than 16%? Ukraine, reports Suzanne Miller, is a country becoming truly desperate. Investor confidence is collapsing, reforms are paralyzed and a liquidity crunch looms.
April 01, 1998
Can Merrill keep Mercury in orbit?
The secrecy of the negotiations and the price paid stunned the City into awed silence. Merrill Lynch's takeover was certainly a good deal for Mercury Asset Management's shareholders. But was Merrill so taken with the brand name that it underestimated the fund manager's problems? Mercury has little room for growth at home and has never had much success expanding abroad. Mercury wants to keep some independence, but how long before it gets Merrillized? Antony Currie reports.
April 01, 1998
BANKING
Bank of Japan: Will Hayami stop the banks being roasted?
A corruption scandal at the Bank of Japan (BoJ) has provided an excuse to install a new team, and to pave the way for a more truly independent central bank. But will it all work out? The institution's image has suffered from the realization that commercial banks have been lavishing entertainment on all-powerful and seemingly unaccountable officials as a way of resolving business issues. An even bigger question mark hangs over the bank's independence from political interference in its interest-rate policy.
April 01, 1998
Telstra fuels an equity boom
Australians, big exporters to Asia, are bracing themselves for economic trouble. But, as Ian Rogers reports, stock prices are still rising. Investors can't get enough of big new issues such as telecoms company Telstra.
April 01, 1998
It's all in the price
After more than a decade of trying, convertible bonds have emerged as a genuine asset class in Europe. At the same time, a once-vibrant Asian market is in reverse. But in both markets there is evidence that participants are struggling to keep up with the sophistication of the product. An overly simplistic approach can be disastrous. By James Rutter.
April 01, 1998
Bargain hunters spread to Europe
First it was a trickle, now it's a stream. The deal-flow in high yield debt issues is swelling in Europe as buyers and issuers prepare for even lower interest rates and the homogenous euro currency bloc. They're all looking for opportunities in the narrow line between debt and equity: the high-yield market. But please don't call it junk. Rebecca Bream reports
April 01, 1998
Andre Lee - Leaving Lehman
Peregrine's last days, by Andre Lee
April 01, 1998
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