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  • Intersec 250: Clash of the titans, once again
  • Banks are so desperate to hire high-calibre staff that in recent rounds of recruiting it was MBA students who were asking the questions before they decided on an employer. But the most fluid job market in more than a decade carries its own pitfalls for graduates - it's easier to land up in the wrong job and the wrong firm. Charles Piggott advises on how to stay on track
  • French prime minister Lionel Jospin wants to increase government spending. But the Bundesbank won't let France into Emu if its budget deficit rises. Unless one gives way, Emu is off. By David Roche.
  • The "irrevocably fixed" exchange rates that come into effect in January 1 1999 may not be quite as fixed as Emu proponents claim. Peter Garber explains how the set-up of Target will leave the system open to attack from speculators.
  • Nick Leeson, the man behind the Barings disaster, is still attracting controversy despite his sojourn at Tanah Merah jail, Singapore. Two rival films on the bank's downfall are set to hit the public some time in 1998, one a BBC drama, the other a feature film based on Leeson's book, Rogue Trader.
  • Members of the European Parliament, forced to run between Brussels, Strasbourg and their constituencies, are the unheeded conscience of Europe. With monetary union, their role may gain stature - they wish. David Shirreff reports.
  • Pfandbriefe leave their Mark
  • So much attention is being paid to reforming America's strict banking laws these days that few seem to spare a thought for the committees at the House of Representatives which have to decide on the issue.
  • Federal Reserve Bank of New York,
  • It's not yet clear how exactly the new European Central Bank will function. Will it, for example, be as independent as the Bundesbank, or will national central bank governors hold sway? By Tess Read.
  • Expect a bull market in shares after Emu. Equities will benefit from higher earnings growth, lower capital costs and a larger pool of domestic funds flows. By Julian Edwards.
  • Think the unthinkable for a moment. If Emu were cancelled, what would be the result: chaos in the markets? The end of the European Union? Perhaps nothing terrible at all. By Tess Read.