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Europe’s self-proclaimed investment banking champions are playing to their strengths, but remain far behind US peers
After quitting M&A and equity capital markets in Europe and the US last year, HSBC is striving to maintain global relevance — and London and New York still have a role to play
Innovation and ambition have been hallmarks of mergers and acquisitions activity this year, but there are some signs of weakness in private equity
Bank M&A is back on the agenda, but talk of SMBC buying Jefferies is premature. The two firms are prioritising their multi-stranded alliance and a takeover now would jeopardise it
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The German lender can’t afford any further introspection after losing its place at the summit of European corporate finance, writes David Rothnie.
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The US firm has been on a trajectory of almost constant growth since the financial crisis. Now it is clipping its wings in fixed income and looking to capitalise on its strengths in European investment banking, writes David Rothnie.
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JP Morgan has unveiled the team it wants to repeat its table-topping success in European corporate finance, following three years of hard graft, writes David Rothnie
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The abrupt departure of Greg Fleming shows Morgan Stanley’s top boss is delivering on his promise to make nurturing the next generation of leaders a defining aspect of his regime, writes David Rothnie
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The US is top of every European banking chief executive’s to-do list for 2016, as they race to comply with new regulations that will define the future of their international ambitions. Consolidation beckons, writes David Rothnie.
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Amid the boardroom turmoil, strategic rethinks and headline grabbing megadeals, Europe’s most senior corporate financiers tell GlobalCapital’s David Rothnie why 2015 was a letdown and why 2016 will be better.