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  • Sponsored by Hogan Lovells
    Limited partners’ ability to engage in management has been a thorny issue. Hogan Lovells' Erik Jamieson and Amelia Stawpert explain why this may soon change
  • There's been much speculation over how to deal with a struggling lender from the country. Gerry Kounadis of the Greek National Resolution Authority explains what is – and isn’t – legally possible
  • Post-crisis regulations continue to target repos. Given their vital role in wholesale markets, other bank businesses will be hit. ICMA's Andy Hill explains why
  • The country’s petroleum industry is struggling under burdensome regulation, corruption allegations and depressed prices. Despite opposition, market conditions could force reforms
  • The outcome of a recent could make or break a new source of liquidity for European projects. Norton Rose Fulbright's Bob Haken explains why
  • Ringfencing proposals face an uncertain future. Morrison & Foerster's Jeremy Jennings-Mares explains why
  • Brown Rudnick's Alex Lipman on why the growing use of adminitrative law judges in enforcement proceedings has defendants and their counsel asking whether it’s possible to get a fair hearing
  • In 2007, Vietnam pledged to the WTO (World Trade Organization) to gradually allow companies from other WTO member countries to open their branches in Vietnam
  • In April 2013, the Act Governing Private Sector Participation in the Operation of State Activities (2013) was published
  • Regulators of developed markets have closely scrutinised derivatives since the 2008 global financial crisis, introducing extraterritorial regulations such as the Dodd-Frank Act and European Market Infrastructure Regulation. Emerging markets, particularly those in Asia, are starting to look at derivatives differently – as a tool that manages, rather than creates, financial risk.