© 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 371,392 results that match your search.371,392 results
  • Asiamoney's first law firm poll shows some interesting trends among Asia's in-house counsel – but we suspect there is one piece of data that Asia's corporates all want to know about: cost. And so they should, when a quarter of them spend over US$2 million a year on lawyer's fees. By Olivia Chow and Robert Law.
  • Lower interest rates. A lower budget deficit. The private sector as the engine of growth. That's the virtuous circle which the new Philippine secretary of finance hopes to achieve. Known as Mr Accountability, two-term senator and former budget secretary Alberto Romulo is an enemy of pork barrel politics and all forms of cronyism and corruption. He puts the case for small but efficient government to Matthew Montagu-Pollock.
  • Cushioned for decades from the full impact of interest rate volatility by a cartel, Hong Kong's banks have been able to keep the party going amid tough operating conditions. But the good times could be over when interest rate deregulation is fully implemented in July. Pauline Loong looks at how the city's banks intend to survive in the further deteriorating business environment.
  • Lower interest rates. A lower budget deficit. The private sector as the engine of growth. That's the virtuous circle which the new Philippine secretary of finance hopes to achieve. Known as Mr Accountability, two-term senator and former budget secretary Alberto Romulo is an enemy of pork barrel politics and all forms of cronyism and corruption. He puts the case for small but efficient government to Matthew Montagu-Pollock.
  • Morgan Stanley knew it had its work cut out when it chose to finance Japanese company Aiful's acquisition of failed consumer credit company Life. But although the deal presented some spectacular obstacles, Japan's first securitization-backed acquisition financing looks like it was worth the effort. By Fiona Haddock.
  • After the euphoria of Estrada's removal, the Arroyo leadership and forthcoming elections in the Philippines are being viewed with comparative calm. New appointments, particularly of secretary of finance Alberto Romulo seem solid, but after past disappointments it will take time for confidence to return. By Matthew Montagu-Pollock.
  • null
  • Axis Capital Management plans to launch by the end of the month a European convertible arbitrage fund that will use derivatives. George Philips, chief investment officer in London, said the fund will buy investment grade convertible bonds and use derivatives to strip out the interest-rate, equity and credit risk. It then hopes to profit from the implied volatility on the convertible rising. Philips said the notional size of the transactions would typically be between USD5-50 million. He expects the fund to return 17.5% profit with 4%-4.5% volatility.
  • KBC Asset Management is buying call options and put spreads on a basket of financial stocks to structure a guaranteed fund. Lode Roose, product development manager in Brussels, said the fund gives investors 110% participation in the upside of a basket of 20 financial stocks with a 90% capital guarantee. The investor wins if the basket of stocks increases in value. Roose said the asset manager started buying the options at the beginning of April when it began marketing the fund and will continue adding to the position until May as more investors come forward. The asset manager has been buying options in typical notional sizes of EUR10-15 million (USD9-13.6 million).
  • Merrill Lynch and Banca Commerciale Italiana have structured a synthetic securitization based on a USD1 billion reference basket of airplane loans, in what is widely thought to be the first deal of its kind.
  • Axia Energy Europe plans to hire up to 15 energy derivatives professionals to expand its structured products desk in London. Uday Narang, managing director and head of trading for Europe, said it plans to hire five or six structurers and eight or nine quants for structured products across power, gas and weather derivatives. The department has approximately five pros at the moment and forms part of the trading division. The pros will be based in London and are expected to be on board by the summer.