GLOBALCAPITAL INTERNATIONAL LIMITED, a company
incorporated in England and Wales (company number 15236213),
having its registered office at 4 Bouverie Street, London, UK, EC4Y 8AX

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  • WESTDEUTSCHE LANDESBANK'S COMPASS securitisation programme vividly illustrates the variety of institutions using securitisation on a small scale, and the flexibility of financing that German investment banks are bringing to their clients.
  • SCANDINAVIA'S DEMOGRAPHIC AND economic fundamentals have not given securitisation an easy ride. The region has some 24 million people - but split between four states, so that the pools of classic securitisable assets like mortgages and consumer loans are relatively small.
  • Repos and securities lending looks set to take off in the new euroland as the central banks increasingly use the product for operating monetary policy, as previously discrete domestic markets meld and as a broader range of investors look to participate in a more liquid and efficient single market.
  • THE ARRIVAL of the euro has spurred index compilers into a flurry of activity to recast their benchmarks in preparation for January 1, 1999.
  • These are busy days for debt originators in Spain. Like their counterparts across the rest of the European continent, Spanish borrowers are having to position themselves for the more competitive capital-raising market that will exist after Emu.
  • LARGELY STARVED OF SUPPLY IN THE conventional UK mortgage-backed market, many participants have pinned their hope on the development of a market for sub-prime, or non-conforming mortgages.
  • Not long ago, in the words of one senior analyst, "credit research was thought of as where a bank puts its geeks to do some number crunching".
  • The relationship between these state holding companies and the investment bankers knocking on their doors for lead management and advisory mandates is a delicate one.
  • Euroweek asked five leading investors to outline how they are reacting to the challenges and opportunities that the euro presents.
  • Many European fund managers have become the prisoners of a consensus about the response they will adopt to the euro. As one puts it: "I'd love to disagree with it, but unfortunately it's inevitable."
  • Italian borrowing in the international capital markets is growing rapidly in the run-up to European monetary union. A wider range of corporates is starting to use the bond markets, diversifying away from bank financing and providing new investment opportunities for the increasingly institutional investor base in the domestic market.
  • Competition for funds in the euro sector will be fierce. On that subject everyone, it seems, is agreed. But will it really be any fiercer than it is already?