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  • A special report prepared by Bank Austria Economics Department
  • Issuer: Canal+
    Amount: Ffr2 billion, exchangeable into shares of Mediaset
    Launched: February 12
    Lead manager: Lehman Brothers, UBS
  • From Holland to Vienna, Ingersoll, Komarovsky and Iceberg are struggling with the new morality ­ ie, telling the truth.
  • A special report prepared by UNEXIM-ICFI Financial Group
  • In the first two months of 1997 an economic state of emergency was announced in Colombia and the currency tumbled. Then, barely a week after the emergency was over, a blow-out $1 billion global bond was issued that catapulted the country out of the second division of emerging markets into the ranks of investment-grade borrowers.
  • Continental Europe makes way for Scandinavia and North America in Euromoney's biannual survey of country creditworthiness. Pressure to conform to Maastricht criteria on Emu has dampened growth, tightened budget deficits and weakened consumer demand. High unemployment and currency weaknesses have pushed countries such as Switzerland, France and Italy down the ranking. Rebecca Dobson reports.
  • 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.
  • Quality and quantity now characterize the Eurosterling marketplace. A growth in corporate paper and Fannie Mae's issue ­ the first sterling global ­ are factors attracting global investors. Katherine Baxendale reports on the forces behind the rise of the sterling bond.
  • For many cynics in the securities industry, the upcoming introduction of the euro had only one real benefit. The enormous cost of converting systems to the new single European currency could be used as timely camouflage to correct the firm's information technology cock-ups of the past.
  • 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.
  • The vogue for euro-linked paper offers German issuers a chance to detach themselves from the fortunes of the Deutschmark bond market. Some big issuers believe the domestic bond market will continue to have plenty to offer; others are betting that the new European currency, the euro, will offer the liquidity they seek