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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
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  • The European Banking Authority’s study of bonus payments, published on Monday, raises the possibility that some banks are breaching the Capital Requirements Directive IV, which requires pay to be linked to the performance of an institution.
  • China has sought yet more intervention to heal its wounded stock market, with the Shanghai, Shenzhen and futures bourses mooting the idea of new circuit breakers that would suspend trading of shares altogether if certain thresholds are breached. But market watchers are divided over whether the move would be a blessing or spell more trouble, writes John Loh.
  • HKEx boss Charles Li hinted on Monday that the recent equity turbulence and surprise currency devaluation meant conditions were not ripe to expand the Stock Connect programme to include Shenzhen. He is wrong and to delay would be a terrible idea.
  • Hong Kong Exchanges (HKEx) CEO Charles Li said earlier this week that a stock market rout in China had made talks of expanding the mutual market access initiatives, including the expansion of the Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect to Shenzhen, more difficult.
  • Citi has appointed David Ratliff to the newly created position of head of public sector banking for Asia Pacific. The move is part of the bank’s strategy to combine corporate and investment banking alongside markets and securities services coverage of public sector clients in the region.
  • Respondents to a new survey by Standard Chartered Hong Kong branch (StanChart HK) are expecting further devaluation of the RMB, but an even larger proportion said they would continue to hold or even expand the quota of RMB-denominated assets in their portfolios.