Euromoney Limited, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 15236090

4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Euromoney Limited 2024

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Search results for

Tip: Use operators exact match "", AND, OR to customise your search. You can use them separately or you can combine them to find specific content.
There are 39,662 results that match your search.39,662 results
  • Euromoney Country Risk
    Notwithstanding the recent rise in its government bond yields, Italy still ranks higher than Spain in Euromoney’s Country Risk Survey, despite the country’s uncertain political outlook.
  • Corporate treasurers are increasingly focused on managing working capital better when buying and selling – and many now realise that supply chain finance (SCF) can help. By breaking down the silos between the purchasing, selling and treasury functions of a business, SCF can ensure good risk management, boost liquidity and improve the balance sheet.
  • Investors may have been too quick to jettison Asian assets during their recent pullback from emerging markets. While some economies – including India and Indonesia – have proved vulnerable to fears of scarcer global liquidity, Asia’s emerging economies still boast stronger macro fundamentals and are better prepared for capital outflows than during earlier crises.
  • Discord exists among corporates, banks and regulators over the approach to bringing payments into global harmony.
  • It has been an oddly eerie summer. Everybody seems to have fled to the beach, leaving a few journalists to eke out the occasional interesting story.
  • "It is borrowers’ own issuance patterns that have led to this state of illiquidity. And what are they doing about it? Nothing. We need dealers and corporate treasurers to engage more constructively on this"
  • Published in conjunction with: ABN Amro • BNP Paribas • Citi • RBS • Standard Chartered Bank
  • Amid the litany of complaints against the sell side, one trader at a large investment manager bemoans the continuing pretence of some banks that they are big traders in many instruments across all markets to all investors. He knows that they are not. Rather, dealers are conserving their ammunition to serve favoured clients and he understands why. He would just like to know where best to direct his business.
  • The debate on how to reform the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) that now so dominate US mortgage finance has been raging almost from the minute they were taken into conservatorship by former Federal Housing Finance Authority director James Lockhart on September 6 2008. In recent months, however, there is a growing sense that all those words might eventually translate into action.
  • A response to the European Commission’s statement of objections is due in October.
  • The revival of viable, well-funded private-label mortgage issuance is the holy grail of the US housing market. Indeed, as the Fed contemplates the tapering of its $40 billion-a-month agency MBS purchases, it is becoming an urgent necessity. But without a wholesale rethink on how US housing is funded, the cards look stacked against it.
  • Investors hold about 99% of all bond inventory. Could all-to-all trading platforms provide the best answer to the crisis in liquidity?