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  • The world is all perversity. The worst that could happen to investors is stronger global growth, producing weak financial markets. That will happen if Japan picks up this year at the same time as core Europe, and there is a continued boom in the US.
  • The European integration process moved on with increasing speed during 1996. As January 1 1999 moves closer, the sustained political will to convert the Maastricht Treaty is clear.
  • A special report prepared by Banco Santander de Negócios Portugal
  • Issuer: Republic of Ecuador
  • Cairo's stock market is rampant. The past 12 months have seen the market take off after the government finally decided to take privatization seriously. But amid the euphoria there are calls for caution as the financial sector leaves the real economy trailing. Nigel Ash takes a closer look
  • FX Poll 1997: Taken aback by a leap forward
  • Officials from Brazil's national treasury are travelling nationwide singing the praises of federal domestic debt to pension fund managers. Later roadshows will sell the same story to insurance companies. They are stressing increased transparency, lower risk, higher earnings potential and a longer yield curve.
  • FX Poll 1997: Taken aback by a leap forward
  • Two new European-currency corporate high-yield bonds appeared last month, opening what could soon become a thriving sector of the international bond markets. The welcome which supposedly credit-risk-averse European bond investors gave to the two deals was quite spectacular.
  • Banks are constantly exploring new and cheaper ways of raising and using capital. After Tier 1 (shareholders' funds) and Tier 2 (debt capital) comes Tier 3 to support short-term trading positions. But only the adventurous Dutch have put Tier 3 to use. There seems to be more mileage in clever structures such as callable perpetuals. Jules Stewart reports.
  • Issuer: Household International
  • Yann Gindre became an instant celebrity last summer - but not for reasons entirely of his own choosing. When most high-rolling Euromarketeers were lying on tropical beaches or on their private yachts, Gindre became the centre of a tug-of-war, as senior executives at BZW in London jockeyed for position following the arrival of Robert Diamond from Credit Suisse First Boston as BZW's new fixed-income supremo.