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Bpifrance pounces to sell Technip block after shares leap
Europe’s self-proclaimed investment banking champions are playing to their strengths, but remain far behind US peers
The most successful investment banks must strive for excellence in managing people
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Signs are growing that Western companies may be on the verge of a wave of moving manufacturing from China to other emerging markets and ‘re-shoring’ them to the home country, a trend that could have profound implications for markets and international politics.
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The fear of a volatile and bitterly contested US election between Donald Trump and Democratic Party challenger Joe Biden is likely to create a keen sense of urgency for companies seeking to sell equity when the European market reopens at the end of this month.
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Morgan Stanley Investment Management has introduced an open-ended equity fund concentrating on high quality companies in emerging market economies.
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Envestnet Inc, the US provider of software to the wealth management industry, has raised $450m via the sale of a new convertible bond, joining the horde of software companies that have tapped the equity-linked market during the pandemic.
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A wave of companies from some of the most distressed industries will test risk appetite with rights issues this autumn, such as shopping mall landlord Hammerson and International Airlines Group, the parent of British Airways. These firms may raise the money they need and survive, but investors would be well advised to exercise extreme caution, for the future is not bright.
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Chinese state-controlled Irico Group New Energy, a solar cell glass maker, has raised HK$2bn ($260.1m) from a dual placement of primary H-shares.
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