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  • STEVEN IRVINE
  • Europe faces fundamental change. This survey looks at some of the uncertainties. Will the single currency collapse? How will Europe's central bank work? And can bureaucrats bridge the gap between rich and poor countries? Introduction by Nigel Dudley
  • In the space of a few years, the Californian boutiques helping high-tech companies come to market have seen their profitable niche invaded by major Wall Street firms. Now banks and investors from across the Atlantic are threatening to get in on the act. But are the Europeans buying into a maturing industry - or a market reaching its top? Michelle Celarier investigates
  • Liechtenstein's ruler, Prince Hans-Adam, was so sure of the benefits of closer economic ties with the rest of western Europe that he threatened to abdicate if his subjects rejected EEA membership. The principality's bankers and lawyers are more sceptical. Their concern is that limited changes to secrecy laws may deter the high-net-world
  • Securities regulator the CSRC was set up in 1992 to bring order to China's new and frenetic securities markets. But its attempts to impose discipline have met with mixed success. Turf battles with other authorities, political agendas that take precedence over market-based listing criteria and high-profile departures have made the regulator as raucous as the markets it was supposed to tame. Sophie Röell reports
  • Although the law on what a lead manager can and cannot say about the success of a bond issue is reasonably settled, it still causes banks and, in particular, their compliance officers, difficulties in practice. By Christopher Stoakes
  • The Italian market is springing to life. Recent successful high-profile issues and a well-managed privatization programme have whetted investors' appetites. Small and medium-sized companies which have gone to the market have seen spectacular gains. But while Italy's stock market is ready to boom, problems remain with Italy's banking structure and corporate governance. Peter Lee reports
  • ...when it's perfectly transparent, but not very liquid. The rise of electronic trading systems in the forex market has had some unexpected consequences.
  • Edited by Peter Lee
  • Edited by Steven Irvine