China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

Up to 40% of China’s $1.7 trillion LGFV loans are at high risk of default. What’s a panicking Beijing to do?

The money network:

The money network:

Why crowdfunding threatens traditional bank lending

September 2003

Corporate governance 2003: Good practice boosts performance

by Julie Dalla-Costa

Results of Euromoney's corporate governance poll suggest that the efforts a company makes to ensure appropriate practices are reflected in its share price.


Full Results: Emerging Markets | Developed Markets | By Country | By Sector

Methodology

THE COLLAPSE OF Enron has forced investors to accept that disasters caused by poor corporate governance aren't the preserve of developing markets. It has also triggered a flood of legislative and regulatory changes and codes of conduct across the developed and emerging worlds to improve systems for ensuring that public companies are run properly in shareholders' interests.

But will such codes really improve matters? Will investors accept their share of responsibility for ensuring good governance and will companies that do the right things benefit in the capital markets?

As a contribution, Euromoney offers its own survey of corporate governance standards at leading emerging-market companies, benchmarked against some leading names from the developed world. While the emerging markets have been further behind in corporate governance practice they've been a step ahead in terms of motivation since the crashes of...


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