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  • The New York Stock Exchange appointed the former head of one of its most bitter rivals to police its market functions, recruiting Richard Ketchum, former Nasdaq president, as its first chief regulatory officer.
  • India's securities regulator will stifle the country's $4 billion derivatives market if it misjudges the riskiness of participatory notes and imposes unnecessary regulation. By Sandeep Parekh
  • The effort to bring international standards to the PRC's growing investment funds industry may fall short because of self-imposed limits, say Effie Vasilopoulos and Katherine Abrat
  • Seventy percent of businesses are affected by weather Clifford Chance has created a new Environmental and Climatic Trading Group to take advantage of the growth areas of emissions trading and weather derivatives.
  • Allen & Overy and Clifford Chance have maintained the top positions in Dealogic's end-of-year project finance rankings, but US firms Latham & Watkins and Milbank Tweed Hadley & McCloy are the year's biggest climbers.
  • Bangkok Bank, Thailand's largest commercial bank by market value, ended 2003 by launching a $907 million public offering of new shares, the largest by a Thai company.
  • Canada's mutual funds industry has so far been largely free of the scandals that have rocked its counterpart in the US. Canadian regulators, however, have not been so lucky in avoiding controversy over their handling of the market.
  • To book tables, contact Dan Rabey on +44 (0) 207 779 8142 or email drabey@euromoneyplc.com
  • Chris Bates looks at the new demands that recently adopted EU rules will impose on stabilization managers for new issues and secondary offerings
  • Russia's new law on currency regulation and currency controls, adopted at the end of 2003, promises a liberalization of currency regulation in Russia. From June 2004, when most provisions of the law come into effect, residents and non-residents will enjoy a regime in which everything is permitted unless specifically prohibited. Business has long awaited such a law.