Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
When staff complain, they deserve a fair hearing, not a wall of silence
Benin reaped the rewards of its sukuk debut last week, and will do so for years to come
Little green men could be closer than they appear
Scrutiny of regulatory proposals by those without securitization expertise is a feature, not a bug
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
The investigative arm of the US Congress has told US regulators that the leveraged lending guidelines should be open to review. But this is nothing new — borrowers have been acting as if they are open to interpretation for some time.
-
The Banque de France has set out its own criteria for the linguistics of the Basel reforms — if only reaching an agreement was as easy.
-
If Qatar does go ahead with a bond, it needs to be the one being selective about which banks it will work with.
-
Recent deals are breathing life into a dim sum bond market that has faced a drought in supply. And with market conditions turning in the sell side’s favour, more issuers should syphon off this renminbi funding stream.
-
The Bank of England is now odds on to raise interest rates at the November meeting of the Monetary Policy Committee in November, after the Consumer Price index reported inflation exceeding 3%, but such a move could tip the UK economy over a cliff.
-
As the world’s finance ministers, central bank governors and investment bankers dispersed from Washington DC at the weekend after the IMF-World Bank annual meetings, a sense of oppression hung over them.