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  • HeidelbergCement kicked off the equity portion of its three-way rescue capital raising last Friday, with Deutsche Bank and Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein as lead managers.
  • Simon Fry, one of the star proprietary traders of the 1980s and 1990s, has returned to the capital markets as chief executive of Crosby Ltd, a boutique investment bank based in Hong Kong.
  • John Craven started with Wood Gundy in 1961, and after a stint at SG Warburg, joined White Weld in 1973.
  • It's difficult to know where to start when talking about Ian Fraser, who died in early May this year. He was a polyglot, speaking French, German and Italian; a war hero, winning a Military Cross for his bravery in Italy during WWII; and a City banker par excellence, under the tutelage of Siegmund Warburg.
  • The link between Warburg and banking goes back more than a century though the family's most famous son - Siegmund Warburg - is the name writ large in the history books.
  • "Sit on a tea tray and pray." Reassuringly, this is not Michel de Carvalho's recipe for pricing a Eurobond, but his advice on the sport of luge, in which he thrice represented Britain in winter Olympics. De Carvalho was also a talented cyclist, competing in the Tour de France in the early 1990s.
  • Mike Sherwood (known as Woodie) is one of the most respected and admired personalities in the capital markets. Indeed, when EuroWeek was researching the market in order to draw up the list of 40 bankers under 40, his was invariably the first name to be nominated.
  • Mike Sherwood (known as Woodie) is one of the most respected and admired personalities in the capital markets. Indeed, when EuroWeek was researching the market in order to draw up the list of 40 bankers under 40, his was invariably the first name to be nominated.
  • Mike Weston, a fixed income veteran at Morgan Stanley, quit as global head of debt syndicate at the US bank in March 2003.
  • I would imagine that for those bankers involved in the birth of the Eurobond market, the global capital markets and their workings would seem to harbour only vestigial similarities with their own early endeavours.
  • Minos Zombanakis joined Manufacturers Hanover Trust in 1957 after taking a masters at Harvard. But his big break came 11 years later when he suggested to his bosses in New York that £5m would be enough to start a new merchant bank in London whose initial role would be to convert short term deposits into Eurocurrency term loans.
  • Rating: Aa3/AA