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  • Indonesia's mutual funds sector fell to pieces in 2005, the victim of insufficient regulations, investor ignorance and greed. The country's fund managers now have a huge task to regain investor confidence. Richard Morrow reports.
  • Domestic and international banks are circling Korea Exchange Bank (KEB), which is expected to be sold in early 2006. Richard Morrow looks at the potential suitors and the repercussions for both KEB and the banking sector as a whole.
  • It's been a colourful era, but the days of the well-connected Chinese banker single-handedly cutting deals in the mainland is coming to an end. Some banks have pursued a broader skill base for some time, while others are now catching on. Elliot Wilson reports.
  • Malaysia has clear aspirations in the world of Islamic finance. And it has the edge in some unusual ways, most notably in the fact that its non-Muslim population is catching on to Sharia-compliant products, writes Andrew Hutchings.
  • Malaysian economic growth forecasts for 2005 are cut back as higher oil prices kick in, and a battle looms over control of Southern Bank Berhad.
  • Robert Fallon, handpicked by Lone Star to be chairman and CEO of Korea Exchange Bank (KEB) in January 2004, has overseen the bank's rapid turnaround. He tells Asiamoney why he hopes KEB can maintain its identity even after a likely sale by its majority owner.
  • Sandra Lee joins SG Corporate and Investment Banking from HSBC Investments.
  • At Asiamoney's fourth Annual Equity Forum, some of the region's top local brokers sat down to discuss the challenges of differentiating research, developing and growing their businesses in the face of stiff competition from their global cousins and, most importantly, their predictions for the year ahead.
  • Mizuho makes a costly stock sale blunder, a Saudi trade delegation finds a Hong Kong luncheon hard to swallow, Nippon Oil wants to butt into the Inpex-Teikoku merger, and Temasek and Dubai's DP World battle it out over shipping firm P&O.
  • Since coming into power in January 2001, Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra has presided over an extraordinarily rapid turnaround of his country's economy. But there are signs that the country's ardour for his far-reaching populist polices may be cooling, whilst economic growth is slowing. Ben Davies reports.
  • Ammar Siamwalla is no stranger to controversy. On several occasions, the former president of the Thailand Development Research Institute and respected economist has criticized government policies.
  • It's been 30 years since Vietnam lifted itself out of the rubble of war. Now the communist state is giving a new twist to its perpetual revolution—entry into the World Trade Organization. Anne Hyland reports.