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  • Awards for Excellence 1997
  • Awards for Excellence 1997
  • Awards for Excellence 1997
  • Awards for Excellence 1997
  • Three years of declining margins have lenders scrambling for yield. They are turning to higher risk areas such as project finance and emerging markets. But the curse of high liquidity soon tracks them down and ruins the rates. Only by aggressive portfolio management and offering additional services can banks make money. Nigel Pavey reports.
  • In 1996 Bankers Trust finally put the Procter & Gamble derivatives fiasco behind it. After a horrible year in 1995 when the market was still unsure whether the bank would make it onto the comeback trail, it surprised even itself in 1996. Earnings per share have tripled to $6.78, return on equity increased from 4% in 1995 to 13% in 1996 and revenues came in at the second-highest in the bank's 94-year history, at $4.16 billion.
  • ...when it's perfectly transparent, but not very liquid. The rise of electronic trading systems in the forex market has had some unexpected consequences.
  • Euromoney's Awards for Excellence continue to generate enormous interest and to be regarded as the industry leader in independent recognition. Each year as the vetting process gets under way, our editorial offices are besieged by bankers and their public relations teams lobbying for their institutions. The excitement continues long after the results are decided as banks rejoice over the awards they have won and fret over the ones they missed.
  • While banks spend millions on creating an "image concept" around the globe, their efforts run into the ground in China.
  • Awards for Excellence 1997
  • Awards for Excellence 1997
  • Red chips have dominated headlines and share trading in Hong Kong in 1997. But who controls these new mainland-owned hongs? And how can analysts and investors value their fast-growing assets. Steven Irvine visits the new taipans.