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  • Global banks may feel that purging their correspondent banking relationships will help them de-risk, but they should beware the unintended consequences.
  • It’s time to get some perspective back into the debate about global foreign exchange.
  • Illiquid markets, limited exchanges and sometimes vague institutional information make Africa’s securities landscape difficult to navigate. Firms such as Imara are in a good place to act as guides.
  • “We’d rather you use the word ‘innovative’ rather than ‘aggressive’”
  • “This isn’t the end. It is the beginning. There are many more stress tests yet to come”
  • Is the eagerness of bank executives to spend heavily on retraining bankers to change their culture achieving anything?
  • When an email dropped into our inbox from BNP Paribas talking about something called the Marylebone Project we were hoping it might be the name of a five-piece band with BNPP’s head of primary markets, Martin Egan, as its lead.
  • Euromoney is on a health kick. Stand outside our UK building near St Paul’s Cathedral, and you’re as likely to see one of our team drawing on an e-cigarette as you are someone with a traditional ‘fag’ these days.
  • The opening up of the Saudi Stock Exchange to foreign investors could be a watershed moment for the country’s capital markets. Bankers predict a rush of deals to soak up demand. But what will foreign investors find in the Middle East’s biggest market? And can structural issues over settlement be solved?
  • No, this headline does not refer to those naughty traders who abused the London fix in the foreign exchange market and caused a number of banks to receive huge fines.
  • It is not often new countries open up to international banks. Nine lenders have recently received licences to operate in Myanmar. It gives them a ready advantage in a country that lacks some basic infrastructure.
  • Intercompany credit data suggests companies are more willing to borrow than banks claim. But what’s the point of banks if they won’t lend?