IFLR is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Search results for

There are 25,886 results that match your search.25,886 results
  • Slaughter and May continued its work representing Punch Taverns in November, advising on the restructuring of the company's two previous securitizations to merge them into a single deal. Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer acted for the banks, RBS and Citigroup.
  • The Indonesian Insurance Regulatory Body has issued new regulations on insurance business in Indonesia. Implemented as of September 30 2003, by virtue of Minister of Finance decrees, these are:
  • The debate over whether the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) will continue to be a self-policing organization will move into a critical phase in the coming weeks. Having recently dealt with embarrassing admissions over director pay and questions about conflicts of interest, the Big Board now hopes that changes to its own board structure and a public enforcement action will silence those who say it should split off its regulatory function.
  • Paul Lejot, Douglas Arner and Mylene Chan of Hong Kong University call for legal, regulatory, fiscal and systemic change
  • Ken Rushton, director of listing at the Financial Services Authority, talks to IFLR's Rob Mannix about proposed changes to UK listing rules
  • A group of investors is forcing issuers to look again at clauses unchanged for decades. Rob Mannix reports
  • Rating agencies said Czech securitization would require legislative change. On the Home Credit Finance deal, lawyers convinced them otherwise. By Christopher Lewis, Harm van Berkum and Tomas Otruba
  • Herbert Smith and Stibbe advised European IT group Getronics on a €100 million ($117 million) convertible bond, one of the first European deals to use coupon escrow to secure interest payments.
  • Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer advised the arrangers on a World Cup bond issued by football's governing body, Fifa, to transfer the risk of cancellation to the capital markets.
  • The Basel Committee has heeded industry concerns and is dropping the requirement for banks to hold capital against expected losses.