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  • Edited by Peter Lee
  • Edited by Steven Irvine
  • The Bankers' Club, 7 Lothbury, London EC2
  • Every time a scandal hits the international financial markets, politicians and the press scream for tighter regulation.
  • ...when it's perfectly transparent, but not very liquid. The rise of electronic trading systems in the forex market has had some unexpected consequences.
  • 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.
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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