Vol. 21 No. 2, March 2007
Index
- Adios free trade?
- Fed bias blues.
- Fannie and Freddie and the subprime mortgage fiasco: how much exposure?
- Wise advice.
- Liquidity and confidence.
- What's in a name?
- Is the IMF obsolete?
- Fear and greed: why the American housing credit crisis is worse than you think.
- The Wall Street slide: why New York is losing out as the world's financial center.
- Hoist with their own petard: how emerging markets use U.S. anti-dumping laws ... against America.
- The Shanghai shock: financial lessons from the late-February 2007 hiccup.
- The Asian myth: the notion that the Asian economies have somehow insulated themselves from the United States is nonsense.
- It takes two to tango: why a big Chinese currency appreciation alone won't cut America's trade deficit.
- Will China surpass the United States? The dangers of the game of extrapolation.
- America's China brigade: a Washington insider offers the lay of the land. Hu's up, hu's down in U.S. China policy.
- The post-Chirac French funk: is a refurbished U.S.-Franco relationship in the cards?
- Why Germans love the euro: and why the "Club Med" remains less enthralled.
- The looming Arab employment crisis: idle hands are the Devil's workshop.
- Venezuela's oil trap: economically speaking, other than oil nothing else is happening.
- G7 reflections: one of the Plaza Accord's behind-the-scenes players offers his insights.
- On African oil.
- On Chinese consumption.
- On Chinese equities.
- On Chinese homeownership.
- On entrepreneurship in America.
- On junk.
- U.S. economic success.
- On China's moves into the Middle East.
- On Chinese innovation, I.
- On Chinese innovation, II.
- On investment banking in the Middle East.
- On private equity and M&A.
- On private equity: 2000 vs. 2006.
- On public pension funds.
- On the Dubai economy.
- On the private equity boom.
- On American "insourcing".
- On emerging market bonds.
- On EU and U.S. economies.
- On hedge funds and Asian volatility.
- On M&A among BRIC countries.
- On market correlation.
- On the EU vs. United States.
- On why the world isn't flat.
- On companies going private.
- On global stock exchanges.
- On Sarbanes-Oxley.
- On the decline of developing world debt.
- On the dominance of the European bond market.
- On the U.S. vs. rest of world.