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  • Finance Minister and Central Banker of the Year: The regional winners
  • If an international bank wants to increase its profile in Russia, it heads straight for Gazprom. Russia's largest company has huge capital requirements for the next few years, and to be seen working on as many of its deals as possible is the best way to market services to other Russian companies.
  • Why investors love Poland
  • Russia's sovereign Eurobonds are still holding centre stage, but the country's cities, banks and corporates are also stepping into the limelight. By Guy Norton.
  • Mahathir Mohamad, prime minister of Malaysia, shows an increasing tendency to talk rubbish. Commenting in early September on foreign investor selling of Malaysian stocks and the ringgit, he said: "They are racists. I say it openly. They are not happy to see us prosper."
  • When Gao Xi-Qing arrived in Hong Kong in August his arrival was greeted by a typhoon called Victor. Staff at Bank of China already acknowledge that typhoon Gao, their new boss, is set to shake things up more than your average king-wind.
  • Singling out the individual may appear out of keeping with the vogue for emphasizing the team. But in China, having the right individual on board is the most important factor in business success.
  • A budget, a new credit policy and a report into currency convertibility, all introduced in the first half of this year, have boosted investor confidence. Phillip Moore analyzes their significance.
  • For emerging-market bond investors in the know, the former Soviet Union - especially central Asia - is the place to be. Debt markets have rallied across the board, yields are mostly buoyant, and currencies have held their own against the dollar. But title and settlement can sometimes be a little hairy. Theodore Kim investigates the excitement.
  • Regional governments are taking back control of local businesses in the name of saving jobs and preventing foreign speculators from taking over. While some observers regard this as an undesirable move, things could be worse. Renationalization, the bogey which haunted Russia's first few years of market reform, has melted away as the Kremlin moves to sell whatever mineral fortunes it has left. But relocalization is just gathering steam.
  • Brazil's companies reach out for funds
  • 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.