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  • Investors have piled into Czech koruna Eurobonds since they were first issued last year. Issuers too have continued to be attracted by favourable swap opportunities. Can the interest be sustained or is the vaunted model market for central and eastern Europe flashy but short of take-off power? Catherine Garner reports.
  • German patriots are already bemoaning the abolition of the Deutschmark after European monetary union; they should be concerned about the demise of the German capital market too. By Laura Covill
  • January's dreadful German unemployment figure is the most politically significant euro event since the Dublin summit. Chancellor Kohl was always seen to be more powerful from abroad than he was in reality at home. He is now seen as a chancellor with a great plan for European integration and no strategy for German economic rejuvenation.
  • The drift from Frankfurt to London gets ever stronger at Deutsche Bank. The January issue of staff magazine International Forum chalked up one further milestone in the exodus when it announced it too has moved from the Finanzplatz.
  • In a few years the merger between Morgan Stanley and Dean Witter will appear epoch-making. It will mark a change in the trend of financial mergers away from flashy cross-border deals to more workaday domestic ones.
  • Environmental legislation is getting tougher and bankers need to study it carefully. The simple act of lending to a company in environmental trouble may make the bank liable. By Christopher Stoakes.
  • Death of a bank
  • Exotics enter the mainstream
  • Country Risk: Switzerland takes a tumble
  • At the eleventh hour, German bankers have begun lobbying to save Frankfurt's financial market. But the legislation they want may come too late to make the city a leading financial centre
  • Credit research has leapt out of the back office. Spotting a cute arbitrage can make millions and banks are paying up for creative users of this fundamental talent. Their thinking? With the coming of the euro, credit differential will be a bigger factor. And in Asian markets there's growing demand for credit expertise. Brian Caplen encounters some at the cutting edge.
  • The derivatives markets have reached a new peak of maturity. Digital and barrier products are commonplace; trades in unusual currency and asset markets are growing in size and volume; and vanilla instruments are being used in ever more sophisticated combinations. Mark Parsley reports.