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  • The leader of the UK Independence Party Nigel Farage interviewed by Euromoney chairman Richard Ensor on stage at this year's Euromoney Global borrowers and investors forum.
  • Financial messaging service provider Swift sees plenty of opportunity for growth in Latin American markets, particularly around regulatory advisory and working with bank clients on deep-dive data analysis, says the group’s regional manager.
  • Bankers are already seeing demand for direct renminbi-sterling deals, and anticipate a rise in volumes and market makers, since the announcement on Thursday it is now possible to directly trade these two currencies in China’s onshore interbank foreign-exchange market.
  • The jury is out on whether the use of regional treasury centres is a cost-effective means for treasurers to minimize the effects of currency volatility in emerging markets.
  • While renminbi trade flows between mainland China and emerging markets continue to grow, many domestic and western corporates remain reluctant to trade in the Chinese currency.
  • The aftermath of the ECB’s negative-rates move has left Scandinavian currencies lacking meaningful direction. Mixed economic data in Sweden, and fears over the damage to exporters in the event of rising rates in Norway, are challenging market positions.
  • Iraq’s economic potential may be enticing regional and western banks to develop operations there but the rise of the jihadist group is cause for alarm.
  • Euromoney Country Risk
    The Asian tiger heads a select group comprising Poland, Israel, Colombia and Uruguay, all resisting the increased investor risks afflicting other EM sovereigns.
  • The rand, as a high-beta benchmark for global risk appetite, has been buoyed up by benign international market conditions. However, analysts say a stubborn current-account deficit and weak growth suggest a bearish stance on the rand is appropriate in the medium to long term.
  • Although terrorist attacks raged in Kenya at the beginning of the week, the country’s first Eurobond and the largest in the continent excluding South Africa was received well, highlighting sustained demand for emerging market debt.
  • The 30-year, $400 billion China-Russia gas deal – which will turbo-charge economic ties, more generally, from infrastructure finance, FDI and currency diversification – heralds a shift in the centre of global economic gravity.
  • Life and logistics are still not simple in Libya. A lot of damage has been done that cannot be fixed overnight. “Everything in Libya, every apartment building or inch of asphalt for a road, involved corruption and fees,” says one Libyan. “In every sector – oil, construction – there is a cloud of doubt hanging over it, not just the LIA, and there is no sense in singling out that one institution.