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

December 1998

US banks: Transparency begins at home



As events of the past year have shown, transparent and timely information is crucial in the financial markets. Lack of information can be a killer, or at the least a severe embarrassment. But ironically those very institutions that have been pushing most for greater transparency in emerging markets, the major US banks, are themselves guilty of hiding their own exposures from their shareholders.

They are not breaking any laws, of course. Each institution complies with the reporting requirements for shareholders as laid down by the Securities & Exchange Commission. That, one would think, ought to provide investors with more than enough information. Not according to Raphael Soifer, banking analyst at Brown Brothers Harriman on Wall Street.

According to his latest country risk survey last month, the six money-centre banks - BankAmerica, Bankers Trust, Chase Manhattan, Citicorp, First Chicago and JP Morgan - report barely half of their emerging-market exposure to the...


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