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  • Australia has one of the best-performing economies in the developed world – saved, in many respects, by the things that were causing consternation and criticism a year or so ago. Chris Wright reports.
  • Asiamoney met with Ian Macfarlane, governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia, in Sydney in February. On the agenda was Australia's economic performance relative to the rest of the world – strong in every sense except the currency.
  • The predominant theme of the Australian debt capital markets for the last three years – the gulf between supply and demand – is set to become much more pronounced this year. Chris Wright reports.
  • The Reserve Bank of Australia has announced the country is out of trouble economically. The state of New South Wales is particularly well positioned to enjoy this renewed growth – it may argue, in fact, that it was never in trouble in the first place. Asiamoney's Fiona Haddock met with its long-serving premier, the Honourable Bob Carr, in Singapore.
  • In previous editions of this supplement, we have interviewed government ministers and members of Axiss Australia on the merits of Australia as a financial centre for the region. This year we decided to do something different: ask the CEOs of the banks that have tried it. They seem to like it.
  • People is what investment banking is all about. But until recently, the investment banking arm of the Bank of China, BOC International, has been rather thin on the ground when it comes to matching the calibre of staff at such global institutions as, say, Goldman Sachs or Merrill Lynch. This is fast changing. Over the lunar new year, the Chinese bank embarked on a hiring spree. Five seasoned bankers were lured from other major banks as the institution girds itself for post-WTO expansion.
  • CNOOC shows hunger for China debt
  • The already depressed Asian FX sector continues to slow this year. Drivers for this fall include the introduction of the euro, consolidation of the banking industry in Asia and the growing role of electronic brokers in the spot interbank market. By Joy Lee.
  • Interview with Ralph Parks to accompany main cover story
  • After a year of volatility, recession and political uncertainty, the dust is settling on the changes the world's investment banks have made to their Asian operations. There are new leaders in place, new strategies underway, new areas of priority – and considerably slimmer headcounts. Who's come out looking best? In the following pages Matthew Montagu-Pollock assesses the positions of the traditional leaders and interviews JPMorgan's Asia chairman Ralph Parks.
  • No changes at the top of our travel poll this year – our respondents just can't find fault with the Ritz-Carlton Millenia in Singapore or Singapore Airlines. They are not so happy when it comes to in-room internet services in Asia's hotels, however. And if only they could stretch out completely on all long haul business flights... Olivia Chow and Robert Law report.
  • Technology Resources Industries (TRI) completed Malaysia's largest equity capital raising since the financial crisis in February. The restricted offer, run alongside a rights issue, brought together an important restructuring. But a last-minute objection from the Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange meant it wasn't all smooth going. By Chris Wright