Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
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
Deal raises questions about whether transaction was done at arm's length
Public pension schemes have sold shares in coal, oil and gas companies but are still funding expansion of the gas industry through infrastructure funds
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
The Financial Stability Board has singled out removing barriers to over-the-counter derivatives reporting as a priority for G20 leaders ahead of their summit in Hangzhou this weekend.
-
ING Bank has obtained a securities branch license from the Financial Services Commission of South Korea, giving it the ability to broker debt capital market and alternative investment deals for clients.
-
China has pushed hard for a greater role for the IMF special drawing rights (SDR) since the global financial crisis. But while the SDR may help the renminbi internationalisation strategy it will not help overthrow the dollar as the de facto world currency, according to Benjamin Cohen, professor of international political economy at the University of California Santa Barbara (UCSB).
-
Symbiont, a startup technology firm specialising in smart contracts and distributed ledgers for financial markets, has named a former Morgan Stanley senior banker as president and chairman of its board of directors.
-
It’s not just the level of delinquencies in subprime auto ABS — which in March hit a record high — that threatens to put the securitization industry back in the spotlight of public disapproval.
-
The Singapore Exchange has received the go ahead from its listing advisory committee to allow companies to float using a new structure, in an effort to deepen the city-state’s capital markets.