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  • AUSTRIA
  • From junior trader at New Japan Securities in 1985 to head honcho of ABN Amro's credit business in 2003 with a staff of 750 under his control, Niall Cameron's star is clearly in the ascendancy.
  • Amount: Eu250m
  • Amount: ¥31.3bn
  • Jimmy Quigley is unusual in the debt capital markets, having remained fiercely loyal to Merrill Lynch, which he joined in New York in 1983.
  • Always impeccably attired, Joan Beck rose to prominence in the early 1980s after leaving Merrill Lynch to head Morgan Stanley's syndicate desk.
  • As a recent law graduate from the University of Reading and a trainee in the back office at Strauss Turnbull in 1965, John Langton imagined that the Eurobond must be a distant relation of Yuri Gegarin. "The incomparable Julius Strauss was looking for somebody who would get into Eurobond settlements," says Langton. "I wasn't very keen because I was preparing for my Stock Exchange exams at the time, but Julius insisted that this was the future."
  • John McNiven, now retired in Sydney, was one of the fixed income team that took Merrill Lynch to the top of the league tables in the 1990s and was a key figure in the birth of the non-dollar global market when he helped to engineer the C$1.25bn deal for Ontario Hydro in November 1990.
  • The backroom boys are the first to be forgotten. As any head of syndicate will tell you, the whole reconciliation process may not be the glamorous side of the business but it is essential. And in the late 1960s settlement, particularly failed trades, was bringing the Eurobond markets to a standstill.
  • If it wasn't for a troublesome knee, John Walsh could have been a champion on the tennis circuit instead of a champion of the capital markets. He was once one of Great Britain's best young prospects. But the qualifying rounds for Wimbledon 1984 proved to be his last tournament: having already had three knee operations, he needed a fourth and he knew the game was up.
  • If it wasn't for a troublesome knee, John Walsh could have been a champion on the tennis circuit instead of a champion of the capital markets. He was once one of Great Britain's best young prospects. But the qualifying rounds for Wimbledon 1984 proved to be his last tournament: having already had three knee operations, he needed a fourth and he knew the game was up.
  • John Winter joined Barclays Capital in 2001 as part of the bank's ambitions to increase the awareness of its capital raising and risk management capabilities in continental Europe. He has not disappointed.