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  • The 1997 Euromoney poll reveals some sharp differences of opinion between borrowers and bankers themselves about which are the best capital market intermediaries. But JP Morgan stays the overall favourite. By Rebecca Dobson.
  • Taiwan's Shanghai Commercial & Savings Bank is an unknown name in global finance. But this private-sector bank is very special. It gets a top ααα in Euromoney's new emerging market bank (Emba) ratings, covering 450 lesser-known banks. Pakistan's state-owned United Bank came bottom. The ratings go where others have feared to tread. Brian Caplen explains their use as a vital tool for counterparty risk.
  • Currency crises in emerging markets are the result of too much foreign capital, not too little. An early warning barometer is a country's "fundamental balance" - current account plus foreign direct investment. But even then, if small economies can't absorb the inflow they should form regional currency blocs. Roll on the Singapore yen, the Polish euro and the Mexican dollar, writes Michael Howell.
  • Much more private-sector activity from Brazil is expected on international capital markets as the privatization programme progresses. Unsecured bond issuance is only part of this expansion. And as hyperinflation becomes a distant memory, the domestic capital market is also growing rapidly. Michael Marray reports.
  • The economic statistics may look promising and the industrial potential attractive, but foreign investors will steer clear of Belarus until the government starts keeping its promises on market reform and adopts a less authoritarian style. Philip Eade reports.
  • Japan has shown a new willingness to intervene in troubled Asian economies, and currency problems are not deterring the banks from pursuing business all over the region. By Jack Lowenstein.
  • series of bankruptcies is battering corporate Korea and putting serious strain on the country's banking sector. But companies and lenders alike are reluctant to embrace radical strategies. The result is a lot of posturing but little in the way of structural solutions. The worst may be yet to come, reports Jack Lowenstein.
  • France's banks are stifled by bureaucratic management, crippled by the over-expansion they undertook in the 1980s and hampered by regulatory obstacles to restructuring. What better time for an outsider with deep pockets to buy into one of the largest banking markets. By John McGrath.
  • RUSSIA: THE NEXT CHAPTER