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  • Greek issuers are still waiting to see the government's legislative proposals to implement the Directive. By Michael Tsibris
  • Danish issuers will have to wait for secondary legislation for full legal certainty regarding the Prospectus Directive. By Steen Jensen
  • To ensure Indonesia's commercial banks maintain their stability and viability in the rapidly developing global banking market, they have been required to minimize potential losses they might incur when they lend money to bad debtors. Banks must be prudent when determining the creditworthiness of borrowers, and funds should only be provided once the bank has satisfied itself as to the quality of the borrower and its assets.
  • Belgium missed the July 1 implementation and securities issuers will have to deal with ad hoc regulation in the interim. By Bert Verdoodt
  • Insolvency and restructuring laws across the EU are a mess of different approaches: some creditor-friendly, some creditor-hostile. Andrew Wilkinson, Tony Horspool and Ian McKim argue that it is time for change
  • China has released its first set of rules for securitization. Marianne Ramel, Béatrice de Meaux-Becdelièvre and Jiang Qian assess the measures
  • The Netherlands is amending the rules that govern Dutch limited companies (besloten vennootschappen). The aim is to have more flexible rules, in line with today's practice. The reform will take place in three different stages. In March 2005, Dutch practitioners handed in their points of view on the first consultation document, which was distributed by the Ministry of Justice.
  • Demand for structured products continues to grow and deals are getting bigger to match this demand. By Louisa Gault
  • Ben Maiden reports on how the departure of William Donaldson could affect the world's most important securities regulator
  • In New York, Linklaters hired Jeff Norton from O'Melveny & Myers. Norton is a banking partner, specializing in leveraged finance transactions involving senior loan and high-yield debt elements. He has experience working in acquisition finance, media and telecoms finance, asset-based finance, debt restructurings and exchanges. His appointment is the sixth in nine months for Linklaters' New York office.