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  • The nominees for this year's Euromoney LMG Wibl awards have been revealed. Winners will be announced at the ceremony on June 16 at London's Jumeirah Carlton Tower
  • Islamic bonds are well-suited to project financing and a rise in popularity for social impact products means demand is there. But sovereigns must pave the way first
  • Starting next year the kingdom's stock market will open to a broader range of investors and migrate to T+2 settlement, in line with international standards
  • Four years after the JOBS Act was passed, US counsel see this highly anticipated rule as potentially market-changing
  • Regulatory barriers and limited awareness of restructuring procedures have plagued foreign bondholders. A new law aims to change that
  • CBRC's latest crackdown on shadow banking follows last year's six-fold spike in debt receivables, which has further rattled the debt-ridden banking sector
  • Brighter days ahead for the world’s former financial pariah Argentina returned to international capital markets in late April, issuing $16.5 billion in bonds. Local and US counsel are cautiously optimistic, seeing both opportunity and challenges ahead.
  • Iran: still not alluring enough to tempt the biggest banks
  • The cross-pollination of asset classes is, by now, old hat. Bonds adopt equity characteristics, there are triple recourse residential-mortgage backed securities, and with structured products it seems the only limit is your imagination. But while such tinkering – albeit more prudentially and closely scrutinised since the crisis – is fair game for most securities, there is one glaring exception.
  • In previous decades, economic policymakers were either coxswains or rowers. In the case of the former, they'd sit at the back, keeping an eye on where the team is heading. The latter simply row with strength.