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  • MoF fries in "no pan shabu shabu"
  • Following a Dutch World Cup soccer victory against Germany in 2002 the Dutch are emboldened to walk out of European economic and monetary union.
  • Journalists are a pretty useless bunch who drink too much and should be kept at arm's length. That's a view many people in the markets openly or secretly harbour. Not Dresdner RCM Global Investors.
  • MoF fries in "no pan shabu shabu"
  • With the merger of SBC and UBS and the sudden exit of both BZW and NatWest from the equities business, one might expect the sinking fees on new international equity issues to be thrown a life-line. Less competition should mean wider margins with fees on international equity deals coming to resemble those in the US, where a lead underwriter can expect 7% for an IPO, down to 3% to 4% for a secondary offer for a large, well-known stock. So, is there any sign of fees rising yet?
  • Korea stares into the abyss
  • Choppy markets have brought large, liquid issues from highly rated credits to the fore. With sovereign borrowing down, supranationals are taking their place. In this environment, getting investors interested in smaller corporate issues is tough. Rebecca Bream reports.
  • After many false starts, the slow train of Indian privatization is picking up speed. Whichever parties form the next government, the sale of state assets will continue. By Kala Rao.
  • By mid-December, bankers, central bankers, governments, the IMF, were increasingly worried that Korea was on the point of financial collapse. Its banks were weighed down by excessive short-term foreign-currency debt; its hard-currency reserves were on the point of exhaustion. Worryingly, the $57 billion multilateral government and IMF aid package hammered out in November had failed to stop the haemorrhaging of liquidity, confidence and credit.
  • Debt securitization, hi-tech IPOs, share buy-backs, complex capital-raising deals for banks ... Nordic finance was never supposed to be this interesting. Charles Olivier reports on the changing face of the Nordic capital markets
  • A ruling by a court in Denver, Colorado, threatened to frustrate all the Wharf group's dealings with US banks. US firms may be entitled to seek redress from their own courts - even if the dispute is on the other side of the globe - but to Hong Kongers this seems like US imperialism. Steven Irvine reports.
  • Privatization of Latin America's utilities has thrown up plenty of investment opportunities. Buyers need to finance not only the purchase but also capital expenditure - especially after years of underinvestment. Both have been affected by the Asian crisis. As general uncertainty about emerging markets persists, there are also concerns about the state of the all-important domestic US capital markets. James Rutter reports.