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  • Intersec 250: Clash of the titans, once again
  • Asian brokers: The old hands fight back
  • Banks are so desperate to hire high-calibre staff that in recent rounds of recruiting it was MBA students who were asking the questions before they decided on an employer. But the most fluid job market in more than a decade carries its own pitfalls for graduates - it's easier to land up in the wrong job and the wrong firm. Charles Piggott advises on how to stay on track
  • SBS-Agro: $250 million, three-year maturity
  • Total-return swaps, options on credit spreads, default swaps - they all tend to be more talked about, than transacted. Except, that is, in Latin America, where banks and portfolio investors are starting to realize the big advantages of using credit derivatives. Andy Webb reports.
  • The volatility of equity derivatives markets in some emerging Asian economies, fed by regulatory anomalies and liquidity shortages, offers the potential for big gains for those with strong nerves. Hong Kong's new status will open up opportunities as well. By Andy Webb.
  • There have been so many bank acquisitions in the US in the past few weeks it is tempting to think that the financial mergers & acquisition boom must now be over. Simply, it seems there are few suitable banks or investment banks left to buy. In truth, the acquisition wave has only just begun.
  • Why does Chase Manhattan Bank's television commercial feature Manchester United slotting goals into the net to a Cantonese commentary? The footage appears courtesy of the biggest football match in Hong Kong this year, which Chase sponsored and made possible - the clash between English champions Manchester United, and the top Hong Kong side South China. Chase is believed to have spent HK$10 million ($1.3 million) to persuade Manchester's "red devils" to come to post-handover Hong Kong.
  • In Euromoney's annual ranking of non-US fund managers, in cooperation with Intersec Research Corporation, the dominant position of the Japanese and Swiss giants is threatened only by further exchange rate movements, and perhaps AXA of France. The global consolidation continues. By Jim Sirius.
  • It's been a year of upheaval for banks in emerging markets. Thailand, Korea and Mexico have been particularly badly affected. The biggest losers in our ranking were public-sector banks. By Robin Monro-Davies, managing director of IBCA.
  • Issuer: City of Stockholm
  • Emu will accelerate the concentration of the forex market towards a few big banks. But will that harm liquidity? By Guy Whittaker.