© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 161 Farringdon Rd, London EC1R 3AL. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions | Cookies

Search results for

Tip: Use operators exact match "", AND, OR to customise your search. You can use them separately or you can combine them to find specific content.
There are 371,222 results that match your search.371,222 results
  • Indonesia's top job was never going to be easy. In the first 12 months of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's rule, there have been unforeseen natural and manmade disasters, a soaring oil price and a sinking currency. On top of it all, he's earning a reputation for indecisiveness, something that could come back to haunt him. Chris Cockerill and Elliot Wilson report.
  • For most foreign investors, China can be likened to a vast, rambling maze. It is full of tempting, but blind, alleys and – somewhere, lurking and hidden – the one true path home.
  • null
  • Inflation hits its highest level for six years, Volkswagen may take a stake in Proton and Penerbangan Malaysia is getting ready to issue its first bonds.
  • The major moves in the region's asset management business. Prudential's Taiwan arm has a new CEO and Fidelity in Singapore looks for a replacement.
  • UBS buys a stake in a Chinese brokerage, Indonesia's government hikes domestic fuel prices, and Japan's Sanyo looks to restructure.
  • What would you do if you inherited a fortune? Private bankers are trying to read the minds of the generation that's taking the reigns of Asian family business empires. They're finding that the wealthy offspring are bigger risk-takers than their parents. Andrew Crooke reports.
  • New rules forcing EU citizens to disclose the interest they receive from offshore accounts or pay a hefty withholding tax kicked in on July 1, leading some to predict clients would shift their assets to Hong Kong and Singapore. But, so far, this has failed to materialize. Richard Morrow asks whether it will happen.
  • China's visible private companies come in all shapes and sizes, yet tend to have one common trait: their attractiveness to foreign investors. Asiamoney profiles 10 of the best-run, or fastest-growing, Chinese private corporates—not the biggest (see table) but the ones identified by mainland-based fund managers, financial advisers, analysts, investment bankers and government officials as those worth watching.
  • Following Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's landslide election victory, what are the key financial policies that he needs to address with his new mandate and can he now achieve them? How vital is definite progress on postal reform for Japan?
  • While China is dishing out aid and building infrastructure for its south-east Asian neighbours, Chinese companies have also been on a buying spree across the region. Anne Hyland reports on how China is aiming to translate its new found economic clout into real political influence.
  • Trade between China and Australia is booming. The fact is both imports and exports are on a healthy upswing as ties grow between the two countries. And contrary to popular opinion, it's not all due to China's prodigious thirst for natural resources. Andrew Hutchings takes a look at the bigger picture.