M&A: The comeback kid

With recent economic data from the US, UK and a few other major economies suggesting a slow but steady return to growth, the outlook for merger and acquisition activity also appears to be getting sunnier after nearly five years of declining or stagnant deal volumes.

Dear financial services regulator…

Ever since the financial crisis, regulators and policy makers at both the national and international levels have pushed through a number of measures to minimise the risk of another great crash.

Has state intervention in banking gone too far?

In the opening of his book, Lombard Street, Walter Bagehot remarked that he would not pass comment on Peel's Banking Act of 1844 as it was still too controversial to discuss. And he wrote this 25 years after the act was passed. I fear we are still, barely five years after the bubble burst, in that early phase of post-crisis clean-up - it is too early to tell.

Long or short (trousers)

Soon the global round of angry G8 street protests will descend on London. This is in spite of the UK government's clever ploy to hold the event in Northern Ireland, a place accustomed to its fair share of civil disturbances over the years and almost as far away from the capital as these British Isles will allow.

Room to improve

Facing low interest rates, deleveraging, recurring scandals and increasing capital requirements, banks have struggled in recent years. The prospects for many of them are no better going forward. Where once, a score of institutions aspired to be globe spanning, universal banks, the ambitions of many would-be financial titans, have been tempered by crisis and overreach.

Closing the communication gap

It will hardly come as a surprise that a survey we publish today shows that institutional investors have become more risk-aware since the global financial crisis. Yet the extent of the shift in mindset is startling: whereas only 30% of investment organisations made risk their highest priority in 2007, today 78% of respondents say their organisation has a very risk-aware culture.

Crunch time for the ECB

Something is very wrong in Europe; unemployment floats near all time highs in the history of the single currency and the euro zone’s economic growth remains meagre at best.

King of the banking world

Earlier this week, the outgoing governor of the Bank of England Mervyn King convened a panel of his high-profile friends to discuss the lessons that economists should learn from the global financial crisis.

All tied up?

The insurance industry has not suffered the same reputation-damaging scandals as the banking industry, however, for some consumers, as insurers are financial institutions they have been tarred with the same brush – and need to prove their worth.

Stock market snakes and ladders

Many of the Chinese companies listed on the German Stock Exchange in Frankfurt continue to trade below their issue price.

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