Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
I don’t need to work, but I’m tempted to go back
Corporate broking relationships endure for decades and build deep roots between both individuals and institutions, enabling banks to win outsized revenues from clients they serve. No wonder that a new crop of banks are expanding their ambitions
Five months in, Alessandro Melzi is getting started on the plan, but his boss is about to change
Paul Gibbs among those departing the firm after long service
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
Deutsche Bank has hired Stephen Paine as global head of infrastructure and utilities, a new role at the bank.
-
JP Morgan has made two senior hires to its China investment banking business, this time poaching from Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Rothschild as it continues to build its franchise in the country.
-
Canaccord has returned to profitability after a period of personal tragedy and collapsing revenues, but questions remain about whether the mid-market integrated model can support global ambitions, writes David Rothnie
-
Bank of America Merrill Lynch has hired Yang Xia from rival UBS for a new role, naming him head of Greater China equities. The appointment takes effect at the end of October.
-
China and the UK are set to usher in a “golden decade” in their bilateral relations, with the two countries proposing a stock trading link as a key part of the policy. Many have denounced the idea as a bridge too far, but if it goes ahead, the move could be a great leap forward for China’s international ambitions, writes John Loh.
-
Royal Bank of Scotland is beginning yet another radical retrenchment of its capital markets business, which will involve wide redundancies, including possibly up to half a dozen of its top capital markets bankers.