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  • SS Euro - sinking the unsinkable
  • With more proven reserves than they know what to do with, Russia's oil companies are keen to take on the world. But to become world beaters they need to restructure, improve their management and form partnerships with western companies
  • Despite nearly breaking up soon after independence, Moldova rapidly established a good reputation with international lenders and investors. It wasn't to last. Worse was to come: not least a stalled privatization programme, an agricultural slump and serious payment problems for energy purchases from Russia. Gavin Gray reports on the attempt to put things together again.
  • For some financial institutions and companies, the Asian crisis is an opportunity. For others it's a simple matter of survival. Investment banks have been among the quickest to slash costs and focus on core businesses. But while some commercial banks are recapitalizing and making provisions for bad loans, others are preparing to expand. Pauline Loong reports.
  • How can an investor get exposure to below investment-grade risk while investingin AAA rated bonds? Credit-linked notesprovide an answer, but does anyone really know how to price them? By James Rutter.
  • What country would be desperate enough to issue a Eurobond with a yield of more than 16%? Ukraine, reports Suzanne Miller, is a country becoming truly desperate. Investor confidence is collapsing, reforms are paralyzed and a liquidity crunch looms.
  • Were you doing anything different from other salesmen at international firms?
  • Peregrine's last days, by Andre Lee
  • Indian companies lack predatory instincts. But in March they discovered a mean streak. A rash of hostile takeover bids - the worst in India - has perked up a dull stock market. These events will, in the coming weeks, test the new takeover code put in place by the Securities Exchange Board of India (SEBI) in February even as the code itself is being challenged in Indian courts.
  • First it was a trickle, now it's a stream. The deal-flow in high yield debt issues is swelling in Europe as buyers and issuers prepare for even lower interest rates and the homogenous euro currency bloc. They're all looking for opportunities in the narrow line between debt and equity: the high-yield market. But please don't call it junk. Rebecca Bream reports
  • Only invest in Russia, say old hands, if you can afford to - and can't afford not to. Companies building factories and brands in Russia face formidable difficulties. Agreements thrashed out with the federal authorities in Moscow are overturned by local officials. Taxes, operating licences and regulations are all subject to change at a moment's notice
  • Finding a straightforward structure for turning UK commercial property into tradable securities has long been a desire of the market. One recent deal points the way. By Christopher Stoakes.