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  • The Ospel interview
  • Western banks and money managers are battling for a share of the emerging markets as a provider of investment funds. One of the fiercest fights is for the short-term cash deposits of Muslim investors, whose volume worldwide is estimated at $50 billion. Despite setbacks and strict rules against investment in interest-bearing securities, Islamic funds are all the rage.
  • Domestic Russian government bills, GKOs, are already popular with investors. Now it looks as though Russian companies will coat-tail their government and issue in the local market. By Sophie Roëll
  • International demand for Russian equity has grown steadily over the past year. But the supply has not kept up pace as companies struggle to cope with confusing laws and accounting muddles. Sophie Roëll reports
  • Investors are awaiting the results of the British general election with mixed feelings. In political and financial circles it's generally forecast that on May 2 the Labour party will win a majority, ending the 18-year rule of the Conservatives. What remains in doubt is the size of the majority the party will command.
  • The quest for Emu market share
  • Which house in the primary international fixed-income markets is capable of catching and overtaking Merrill Lynch? Goldman Sachs or Morgan Stanley? Certainly Goldman is going like a runaway train this year. Morgan Stanley on the other hand needed a bump-start. How about JP Morgan, the bank with class written all over it?
  • Banks putting the wrong value on out-of-the-money options isn't a new phenomenon, but today's fat bonuses and fiercely competitive markets lead us into temptation, says David Clark.
  • The World Bank's decision to open up its 25-year Eurorand offering for the third time late last month and the EIB's R100 million ($23 million) five-year deal are signs of renewed confidence in this nascent market. The next step in the market's maturing must be its use by local issuers, which is expected soon.
  • Players in the yankee market heaved a collective sigh of relief when the fed funds rate was increased. Following a near-record year in 1996 there were just 11 public yankee issues in February and March. The reason they had been waiting for the Federal Open Market Committee move which came at last on March 25.
  • Indonesia's central bank governor, US-educated Soedradjat Djiwandono, has his work cut out. His tasks include maintaining investor confidence against a background of political instability and concerns about forthcoming elections. Maggie Ford reports
  • Ideal location or in-room modems, seat size or frequent-flier programmes: what do business travellers value highest in their trips around the world? Garry Marchant pins down the priorities of some top businessmen and asks which hotels and airlines measure up best to their demands.