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  • The Bankers' Club, 7 Lothbury, London EC2
  • Every time a scandal hits the international financial markets, politicians and the press scream for tighter regulation.
  • Senior executives tremble when McKinsey and Co comes in to examine a bank - its consultants' fixation with the bottom line is legendary. But is there as much myth as substance to the reputation? Michelle Celarier examines the performance of those high-flyers who've left the consultancy to occupy top positions in banking and the McKinsey philosophy they bring with them.
  • Nine months of takeover madness in the Czech Republic has left foreign and minority investors bewildered. Their rights have been ignored frequently by voucher funds trading blocks of shares privately among themselves. Now new regulations are in place to try to curb excesses in the Prague equity market. But their calming effect on one of the wildest emerging markets will at best be limited. Brian Caplen reports
  • The London Metal Exchange, the world's top copper exchange, rode out the drama of Yasuo Hamanaka and Sumitomo's losses. But is it crying out for reform, and is it an efficient means of price discovery? Christopher Spink reports
  • This year, Euromoney's Awards for Excellence are broader in scope than ever before. A number of new categories have been introduced to reflect changes in the structure of international markets.
  • Chief executive, Credit Suisse Financial Products
  • Twenty-five year veteran of the capital markets Hans-Joerg Rudloff and his 18-month-old investment bank MC Securities have given up their independence. Rumour had it that it was a consequence of disaster for the bank in Russian markets. Looking deeper, though, it seems more like a victory. Steven Irvine reports
  • Edited by Brian Caplen
  • When in Rome, don't count your chickens Komarovsky and Ingersoll go surfing and rediscover the lost art of global whingeing JJ Ingersoll, our head of global focus, is talking incessantly about technology because he says "that's where the kids are at". I don't look convinced, so he double-clicks on his mouse, and tells me to watch this. A whole series of windows peel like bananas before my eyes.
  • German repo-traders are besieging the Bundesbank with complaints that its minimum-reserve requirement is killing their business. But, asks Laura Covill, will things get any better if the Bundesbank relents?
  • The internet's free technology raises questions about all the old ways of doing things. It makes communication easier than ever - both inside and outside a company - and it revolutionizes information storage and access. But who will be first against the wall when the changes begin to bite? Felix Salmon investigates how far the net will shake up banking