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  • In Euromoney’s December 2014 issue, we described in detail how Bank Asya had become a political football in Turkey. Politics and banking now seem to have combined to create a row in Turkey’s football community as well.
  • We at Euromoney would never claim credit for Romania’s dramatic 25 year shift from the deepest, darkest communism of the Ceausescu era to today’s EU membership and its knocking at the euro’s door, but we’ve been fascinated to learn we’ve had a modest role in its economic transformation.
  • Brazilian bank Bradesco opens its London office on February 9. A small delegation of senior bankers from the bank’s Brazilian headquarters will fly over to mark the occasion.
  • The news that Abu Dhabi’s International Petroleum Investment Company has secured naming rights to Real Madrid’s home ground – turning it into the Abu Dhabi Santiago Bernabeu – represents an interesting branding exercise. Sovereign wealth funds rarely seek brand recognition: usually quite the reverse.
  • Everyone was a little nervous at the contents of the first inquiry into the nation’s financial services industry in over 25 years. It isn’t as traumatic as most feared, but it leaves some important issues unanswered.
  • Tax reforms from Chile’s new, left-leaning government are having an unsettling effect on the economy, which is also suffering from a plummeting copper price. The country’s new president is looking next to tackle inequality with further reforms, but as a result the pressure will ratchet up its strong credit rating.
  • While finance ministers come and go, one man has been a figure of constancy for the nation’s economy: central banker Mugur Isarescu. He has created a fully functioning central bank in a market economy from the shell of a communist regime. With inflation under control and the exchange rate stable, what is his next challenge?
  • Standard Chartered’s PR machine does not seem to be helping turn the bank’s story around at a critical time for CEO Peter Sands.
  • How did the relationship of the Swiss franc and the euro turn out to be purely platonic? Conscious uncoupling was perhaps inevitable.
  • Malaysia’s banking community prepares for the next chapter after an attempt to merge three banks ends in failure to complete the deal.
  • Europe’s great disintermediation is stalling. Yield-hungry institutional investors are driving demand for loans at the riskier end of the credit spectrum. Banks, pumped with ECB-printed liquidity and desperate to put their capital to work, are getting off the fence. It could be music to Mario Draghi’s ears. But is a sudden turn away from the bond markets, at increasingly aggressive lending rates, what Europe really needs?
  • The eurozone’s economic fortunes should start to recover with the arrival, at last, of full-blown quantitative easing. As the world’s leading currencies are set for a race to the bottom, it could be time to buy gold.