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  • Firms reunite for Indiana toll privatization White & Case, Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe and Mayer Brown Rowe & Maw were among the advisers on the biggest US highway privatization to date.
  • The construction industry in Tanzania has evolved over the years to include more and more capabilities, such as all kinds of civil works (roads, bridges) and more advanced forms of residential and commercial buildings, as well as electrical and specialist fields. Between 1997 and 2005 the number of registered construction contractors grew from about 100 to about 1400.
  • A new Securities Act (Official Gazette of RS, 47/06) will apply from December 11 2006 in Serbia. The main reasons for the revisions to the Securities Act are its rather vague and often unresolved provisions and the fact that the Act is not fully harmonized with general corporate and financial laws in Serbia.
  • Kathy Stones explains the impact of the final chapter of the Eurofood insolvency case
  • Alan Beller, former head of the SEC's division of corporation finance, talks to Ben Maiden about his part in a regulatory revolution
  • Gary Rice breaks down the latest US proposals on Basel II and explains why lawyers must be aware of them to advise clients adequately
  • Why the European Commission's attempt to amend the law on contractual obligations will raise the ire of English lawyers, by Stuart Dutson
  • Mark Johnson and Tim Edgar set the enforcement challenge of Hong Kong's SFC in an international context
  • Although it made some changes to the Capital Markets Act (Act CXX of 2001; the CMA), the implementation of EU Directive 2004/25/EC of April 21 2004 on Takeover Offers did not bring big changes to the sanctions system, nor did it resolve the existing ambiguities in Hungary.
  • From July 1 2006, any enterprise invested directly by the State-Owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (Sasac) will be supervised and managed by Sasac in connection with its investment activities, including fixed assets investment in China, acquisition of property rights and long-term equity investment. This is pursuant to the Supervision and Administration of Investment of Enterprises Invested Directly by Sasac Tentative Procedure (the Procedure), which has been promulgated to lower investment risk and standardize investment activities by state-invested enterprises with the aim to maintain and increase the value of state-owned assets.