All IPE articles in June 2003 (Magazine) – Page 2

  • Features

    It's no different this time

    June 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Deepest and most liquid market

    June 2003 (Magazine)

    Ask any manager of US fixed income why investors need to be invested in US fixed income and they will tell you that no bond market is so large or so wide or so deep or so liquid. Worth an estimated $7trn (E6trn) it dwarfs every other market in the ...

  • Features

    Cut through to essentials

    June 2003 (Magazine)

    After three years in a bear market that has seen asset managers operating in Europe bringing out the magnifying glasses to scrutinise the bottom line of a business formerly held up as the great profit driver, you could expect things to be different for those responsible with plotting the way ...

  • Features

    Putting custodians to the test

    June 2003 (Magazine)

    Clients actively involved with their custodians know their provider does not just offer custody and settlement services. All custodians these days are leveraging the existing relationships they have with their custody clients. They are keen to add to the list of ‘value added services’ used by their clients. Many believe ...

  • Features

    Short end of curve opens up

    June 2003 (Magazine)

    The last month has seen an immense rally in government bonds, predominantly spurred by Alan Greenspan’s comments. His hints at concerns of deflation in the US have given the market the impression that an increase in interest rates by the Fed will be a long time coming. Economic data released ...

  • Features

    ECB critical

    June 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    End-to-end cost measurement

    June 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Risk control now at the core

    June 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Coming in from the cold

    June 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Europe's end-game comes closer

    June 2003 (Magazine)

    Along with the untimely, if unlamented, demise of the global Straight Through Processing Association, the acquisition by State Street of Deutsche Bank Global Securities Services was undoubtedly one of the more notable developments in the industry during 2002. The transaction put State Street at the very top of the custody ...

  • Features

    Clamping down on costs

    June 2003 (Magazine)

    There is more pressure than ever on pension funds to keep a lid on their costs. “That’s because of the current environment,” says Ron Hitchens, financial controller of the Xerox pension fund in the UK. “Falling markets and therefore falling values of pension funds are happening at a time when ...

  • Features

    Casting a jaundiced eye

    June 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Building a pension factory

    June 2003 (Magazine)

    It was more than two years ago that HypoVereinsbank, the second largest German retail bank, decided to strengthen its position in the pensions area. This was a brave move at the time, as for decades pensions had been a stronghold of the insurance industry, protected by tax regulations that provided ...

  • Features

    Borsa's place in the sun

    June 2003 (Magazine)

    When Borsa Italiana, the Italian Stock Exchange, introduced a central counterparty (CCP) for its cash markets on 23 May, it was the latest step in a re-engineering of Italy’s post-trade environment aimed at greater integration of the country’s markets with those of Europe. The ultimate aim of a series of ...

  • Features

    Open book

    June 2003 (Magazine)

  • Book Review

    Book review: 'European Pensions & Global Finance'

    June 2003 (Magazine)

    Gordon Clark’s book, European Pensions and Global Finance, provides a refreshing addition to the burgeoning literature on social security and old age retirement security. Rather than offer another solution to the pending crisis, he reviews the political economy and economic geography to examine the role and status of European pension ...

  • Features

    The bond error

    June 2003 (Magazine)

    Only an actuary or an accountant could think that pension liabilities are at all like fixed interest bonds, not subject to the whims of price and wage inflation. Yet Germany is about to make the same mistake that the US, Britain, and Holland have already made, of thinking that bonds ...