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  • HSBC regains its crown as the leading foreign exchange house in the region – but its perennial rival Citibank remains the most respected derivatives bank. By Olivia Chow and Robert Law.
  • Kenton Farrow is head of the Australian Financial Markets Association and the Securities and Derivatives Industry Association – a division of responsibilities that is unique in the world's financial markets. He insists there's no conflict and that this is the way of the future. By Chris Wright.
  • Having money is simple, say those who have it. The difficult part is finding a good banker to help that money grow. Pauline Loong looks at how some wealthy people choose their financial managers, listens to their complaints, and receives some suggestions from professionals on how best to invest in these uncertain days.
  • The bank consolidation measures set in stone by Bank Negara Malaysia's recently released Financial Sector Masterplan have unleashed a wave of fear and speculation in the country's banking sector. Which banks stand to loose out? Matthew Montagu-Pollock reports.
  • The bank consolidation measures set in stone by Bank Negara Malaysia's recently released Financial Sector Masterplan have unleashed a wave of fear and speculation in the country's banking sector. Which banks stand to loose out? Matthew Montagu-Pollock reports.
  • The Capital Markets Masterplan released by Malaysia's Securities Commission in February is a breath of fresh air. The document represents in detail the views of some of the country's most progressive financial reformers. Matthew Montagu-Pollock reports.
  • The Capital Markets Masterplan released by Malaysia's Securities Commission in February is a breath of fresh air. The document represents in detail the views of some of the country's most progressive financial reformers. Matthew Montagu-Pollock reports.
  • The sparkle emanating from newly revamped downtown Kuala Lumpur is only a sheen. Although foreign investment remains strong, sluggish growth, a declining economy and the rekindling of racial tensions indicate that Malaysia has not truly shed its financial and political woes. Matthew Montagu-Pollock reports.
  • Another landmark from DBS sees Singapore become the first Asian nation to allow its banks to issue hybrid tier one capital. It gives DBS a useful capital management tool and shows an accommodating attitude in Singapore. By Chris Wright.
  • What everybody feared finally happened in mid-March. Asia Pulp & Paper, the Singapore-based, US-listed conglomerate with assets in Indonesia, China and India, and more than US$10 billion in debt, announced a standstill on debt payments in advance of a total restructuring. As rating agencies rushed to downgrade APP to default level, creditors slapped in lawsuits to Singapore courts. ABN Amro Bank, which is demanding US$31 million from three of APP's local Indonesian subsidiaries, leads a pack of eight creditors. But in Jakarta, the Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency (Ibra) had been even faster on its feet in anticipating potential fallout from the biggest emerging market default ever.
  • The sparkle emanating from newly revamped downtown Kuala Lumpur is only a sheen. Although foreign investment remains strong, sluggish growth, a declining economy and the rekindling of racial tensions indicate that Malaysia has not truly shed its financial and political woes. Matthew Montagu-Pollock reports.
  • Societe Generale Australia was on the ball when the bank spotted the opportunity to arbitrage between spread widening for auto sector credits in the US dollar market and spread widening for that sector in Australia. For the first time in the Australian market, the bank came up with the idea to buy US dollar bonds, repackage them into Australian dollar notes and sell them on to local investors. But while the bank was marketing the deal, auto sector spreads at home blew out, leaving bankers wondering if SG made a turn on the deal or hit the skids. In early March, SG Australia used its multi purpose ACE Funding securitization vehicle and sold A$100 million (US$49.1 million) of term market bonds to local Australian investors collateralized by global US dollar bonds that had been issued by Ford Motor Credit. The underlying Ford bond pays a fixed rate coupon semi-annually, but SG repackaged them as quarterly pay floating rate notes.