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?

Euromoney’s 2012 FX survey results

Euromoney’s 2012 FX survey results

Access the results now

August 1998

Taxation: All in the name of harmony



Why should a UK bank become a tax collector for the Germans? That is the not-so-hidden agenda that international bondholders see behind a proposed EU directive on taxation of savings.

They fear that such a directive, if implemented, could cause a tax event that triggers wholesale calling of up to 8% of the $3 trillion Eurobonds outstanding, resulting in a chaos of refinancings in a market already heavily stressed by Emu and the year 2000 problem.

The proposal is the "ill-conceived brain-child of German chancellor Helmut Kohl in an attempt to win votes for his re-election in September", Eurobond specialists opine. If so, it may die a well-deserved death as early as October, they hope and pray.

The proposal, rushed out in May, only five months after the first discussions by European economic and finance ministers (Ecofin) in December, is aimed at "removing distortions in the single market", according to...


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