April-May 2009

The new scramble for Africa

The new scramble for Africa

Governments and private investors are putting tens of billions of dollars into trying to secure land and food from Africa, to position themselves against a growing global food shortage, reports Mark Weston.

Shoulder to the boulder

Shoulder to the boulder

For the second time in 12 years, Russian investment banks have gone from dizzying boom to disastrous bust. How will they fare in the post-crisis world, asks Geoffrey Smith.

Out of the frying pan

Out of the frying pan

Anvar Saidenov certainly doesn’t dodge the tough jobs. For several years, he had the task of regulating Kazakhstan’s over-heating banking sector. Now, he’s been put in charge of sorting out the restructuring of the country’s biggest bank, BTA, which the government declared insolvent in February.

Pollution solution

Pollution solution

The carbon trading market could be about to go global, with the US and China considering joining cap and trade systems like the EU’s. But is the EMEA region in danger of missing the boat? Julian Evans reports.

Sharia: no protection from the storm

Sharia: no protection from the storm

Many Middle Eastern investors and bankers watched complacently as the credit crunch devastated western markets in 2007. But now, several sukuk are also being restructured, showing the rain of this crisis falls on the virtuous and the wicked alike. Eva-Luise Schwarz reports.
 

Courage, mon brave

Courage, mon brave

If you can keep your capital adequacy ratios, when all around you are losing theirs, then you will be a successful CEE & CIS bank, and worthy of an emeafinance award.