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  • Following a Dutch World Cup soccer victory against Germany in 2002 the Dutch are emboldened to walk out of European economic and monetary union.
  • Until recently, the name of Nomura, Japan's largest investment house, did not mean much to the general public in Bulgaria. Recently, however, the Bulgarian media have been eager to find out more about Nomura as its European executives were due in town, intending to acquire one of the the country's best banks.
  • It's been a period for emotional farewells recently. As investment banks merge, sell or close down, several familiar names have disappeared for good. Over the past few months we have said goodbye to BZW, NatWest Markets and Peregrine.
  • Korea stares into the abyss
  • Bahraini bankers worry about a new Gulf war and fall-out from the Asia crisis. But there may be a bigger threat: competition for Bahrain's role as the Gulf's financial centre. It is responding by strengthening regulation, encouraging deeper capital markets and pushing for greater regional cooperation. By Nigel Dudley
  • Last December, Korea staved off default by a whisker. As the rest of the world dithered, the US banks came up with a rescue plan. It bought time while two heroes emerged to hammer out a deal: Citibank's debt-crisis veteran Bill Rhodes and Mark Walker, one of the toughest lawyers in the business, acting for Korea. The battle was all about bank relationships and the double-edged sword of market forces. Peter Lee reports.
  • Canadian bank CIBC has built up a good track record in the US since developing an investment-banking strategy in the early 1990s. Now it's consolidating its position south of the 49th parallel by merging with New York firm Oppenheimer. Michelle Celarier reports.
  • Blue Flag, the regulatory database developed by Linklaters, is the benchmark by which all capital-markets law firms should be judged, says Christopher Stoakes.
  • MoF fries in "no pan shabu shabu"
  • 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