Preemptive action: Mitigating project portfolio risks in the financial services industry

Preemptive action: Mitigating project portfolio risks in the financial services industry is an Economist Intelligence Unit research report, sponsored by Oracle. It is based on interviews and research.

The paper draws on two main sources for its research and findings:

Global Fraud Report 2010-2011

If fraud were a virus, almost everyone would be slightly ill

The annual Global Fraud Survey, commissioned by Kroll and carried out by the Economist Intelligence Unit, polled more than 800 senior executives worldwide from a broad range of industries and functions in July and August 2010.

Of the respondents, 88% report that they had been hit by at least one type of fraud in the past year, a figure broadly similar in every region and consistent with those of previous years.

The return of the branch?

A decade of innovation in the high street has left many banks’ retail branches looking tired and out of touch. While other retailers competed for the attention of customers, banks and building societies (mortgage banks) seemed oddly content to sit back. Many even made the mistake of thinking they knew best. Fed up with being pushed around, many of their customers deserted them in favour of Internet start-ups that promised to listen and do as they were asked.

After the storm

After the storm: a new era for risk management in financial services is an Economist Intelligence Unit report that explores the way in which risk management is changing at the world’s financial institutions in response to the global financial and economic crisis.

Prospects for real estate

Written by the Economist Intelligence Unit and commissioned by Barclays Wealth, this tenth volume of Barclays Wealth Insights looks at investor perceptions of the global real estate market.

Brazil Unbound

Brazil has never been so popular among investors as it is now. Interest has risen steadily over the past 15 years as the country has managed to overcome one political, macroeconomic and business challenge after another. Privatisation, liberalisation, a new stable currency, the smooth handover of political power, to name but a few achievements, coupled with a boom in global demand for Brazil’s copious supplies of commodities, have boosted foreign currency earnings and fired up consumer spending. Brazil has been transformed from “country of tomorrow” to “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity”.

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