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  • 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.
  • Finance Minister and Central Banker of the Year: The regional winners
  • Brazil's companies reach out for funds
  • Deals of the Year
  • In the game of Monopoly there's nothing worse than going to jail. Thanks to a bizarre negative-pledge clause written in the mid-1980s, Westpac has suffered the capital markets' equivalent. For more than a decade, it has been locked away from the international bond markets. But not any more. The Australian bank received its get-out-of-jail-free card on August 26. Now, free to borrow without constraint, it is mustard-keen to enter the bond market.
  • Finance Minister of the Year: Chubais forces the pace
  • Finance Minister and Central Banker of the Year: The regional winners
  • The quest for a new El Dorado
  • Oriental Hotel,
  • 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.
  • 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.