Top section
Top section
Artificial intelligence is changing the investment banking game. But banks are divided on whether to cut costs or try and win more deals
Ex-Crédit Agricole banker to be based in Paris
Édouard Sauce had been with the firm for almost a decade
More articles
More articles
More articles
-
Crédit Agricole won an appeal against the European Central Bank on Wednesday against fines levied against the treatment of some of its instruments as common equity tier one (CET1) because the central bank had provided “inadequate reasons” for penalising the French lender.
-
In this round-up, Credit Suisse is reportedly seeking a bigger share in its onshore securities joint venture, Weibo’s parent Sina Corp considers delisting from Nasdaq after two decades and the former head of China’s securities regulator said easier delistings would improve the stock market.
-
In this round-up, the latest cluster of Covid-19 in Beijing city comes to an end, the US imposes sanctions on four Chinese officials and Mainland-based social media apps are faced with more pressure.
-
The head of the World Bank has, for the first time, called for parts of the sovereign debts owed by the world’s poorest countries to official bilateral creditors to be cancelled, in the face of the coronavirus’s impact.
-
A new US Commodity Futures and Trading Commission rule to restrict post-trade name give-up on swap execution facilities (SEFs) is causing some confusion in the market as participants work to a tight deadline.
-
Momentum is growing for the economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic to have a strong green thrust, as the UK’s mini-Budget and comments by European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde made clear this week. Capital market participants are enthusiastic about the prospect and expect it to further green the markets — but how far the drive goes will ultimately depend on politics, write Mike Turner, Jon Hay and Jasper Cox.
Sub-sections