Corporate Finance magazine July 2004

Domestic deals imply long-term M&A growth European regulator probes rating agencies Corporate treasury concerns over compliance Largest combined exchangeable in Asia M&A activity spurs lending market Bond investors flock to Gazprom ABM AMRO opens interest rate swap market Stock options expensing to be delayed US companies accept SOx as part of governance strategy US companies […]

Domestic deals imply long-term M&A growth
European regulator probes rating agencies
Corporate treasury concerns over compliance
Largest combined exchangeable in Asia
M&A activity spurs lending market
Bond investors flock to Gazprom
ABM AMRO opens interest rate swap market
Stock options expensing to be delayed
US companies accept SOx as part of governance strategy
US companies behind on Section 404
The first European-backed Islamic bond
Growing confidence in mid-market transactions
Compliance slips down the finance agenda, claims report
SGCIB adds to Italian M&A team
IASB makes IAS39 amendments
Sungard’s AvantGard proves popular with telcos
Pension deficits offer M&A poser
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley cash in on Chinese IPO’s
Japan’s audit firms to increase scrutiny, warns accountancy institute
UK corporates: the kings of late payments
BoNY strong ADR showing
IIF criticizes Basel II

Access intelligence that drives action

To unlock this research, enter your email to log in or enquire about access