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  • Ever had the feeling someone is watching you? You just might be right if you're a high-flier working in the City of London. Bosses are increasingly taking steps to ensure that employees intending to leave don't take valuable information, clients and colleagues with them.
  • Over the past three months Euromoney editor Garry Evans interviewed Ospel for a total of five hours, twice in Ospel's office in Basel and once last month, the day after the bank announced its 1996 results, by video link-up between London and Basel. The full 15,000-word text follows.
  • A declining budget deficit and rising savings have given Hungarian corporates their first chance to launch medium-term domestic bonds. Will any of them follow the lead of Pannon? Henry Copeland reports
  • The Ospel interview
  • Western banks and money managers are battling for a share of the emerging markets as a provider of investment funds. One of the fiercest fights is for the short-term cash deposits of Muslim investors, whose volume worldwide is estimated at $50 billion. Despite setbacks and strict rules against investment in interest-bearing securities, Islamic funds are all the rage.
  • Domestic Russian government bills, GKOs, are already popular with investors. Now it looks as though Russian companies will coat-tail their government and issue in the local market. By Sophie Roëll
  • International demand for Russian equity has grown steadily over the past year. But the supply has not kept up pace as companies struggle to cope with confusing laws and accounting muddles. Sophie Roëll reports
  • Following the announcement in February of a merger between Morgan Stanley and Dean Witter, investment bankers have been guessing about the shape of other such deals. Few would have predicted the strategic alliance unveiled in March between Bank of America, the US's third-largest commercial bank, and DE Shaw, a publicity-shy New York-based investment bank, run by computer scientists.
  • Investors are awaiting the results of the British general election with mixed feelings. In political and financial circles it's generally forecast that on May 2 the Labour party will win a majority, ending the 18-year rule of the Conservatives. What remains in doubt is the size of the majority the party will command.
  • Has the European Bank for Reconstruction & Development outgrown its usefulness in Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic? Some financiers believe the EBRD should concentrate on less-advanced countries with less developed capital markets. In Hungary they see it as a rival ­ aggressive and deal-hungry as any merchant bank. David Shirreff reports.
  • The quest for Emu market share