Euromoney Limited, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 15236090
4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX
Copyright © Euromoney Limited 2024
Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Search results for

Tip: Use operators exact match "", AND, OR to customise your search. You can use them separately or you can combine them to find specific content.
There are 39,451 results that match your search.39,451 results
  • When Armstrong World Industries, a $2 billion US company, announced in early June that it was launching a $354 million hostile takeover of Domco, a Canadian floor-products maker controlled by Sommer Allibert of Paris, investment bankers were surprised to learn that the company's long-time investment banker, Goldman Sachs, was not advising Armstrong.
  • Finance Minister and Central Banker of the Year: The regional winners
  • The Russian $90 billion promissory note market is the largest debt market in the country. But major reforms are required for it to mature into a mainstream corporate bond market - and yields must remain high or foreign investors will not be willing to take the extra risk. By Brad Durham.
  • Deals of the Year
  • The Mexican financial scene has substantially changed since the 1994 crisis. Out of the dust of the crash broader and better organized capital markets have emerged. Debt restructuring has built up yield curves and bank asset sales are creating new instruments. Even the equity markets seem more buoyant. Jennifer Tierney reports.
  • The old guard remains in control at Gazprom, Russia's dominant gas producer. But can they fend off plans to liberalize the gas sector?
  • Want to buy a biggish local bank at a knock-down price? Join the queue of foreigners bidding for former state-owned banks in central Europe - but watch out for messy loan books and murky questions of ownership. Antony Currie reports on the restructuring of the region's banking systems and profiles three of the newly foreign-owned banks.
  • Finance Minister and Central Banker of the Year: The regional winners
  • If an international bank wants to increase its profile in Russia, it heads straight for Gazprom. Russia's largest company has huge capital requirements for the next few years, and to be seen working on as many of its deals as possible is the best way to market services to other Russian companies.
  • Why investors love Poland
  • Russia's sovereign Eurobonds are still holding centre stage, but the country's cities, banks and corporates are also stepping into the limelight. By Guy Norton.
  • Mahathir Mohamad, prime minister of Malaysia, shows an increasing tendency to talk rubbish. Commenting in early September on foreign investor selling of Malaysian stocks and the ringgit, he said: "They are racists. I say it openly. They are not happy to see us prosper."