Opinion/People
Column: Charles Cronin
Flawed models, conflicts of interest, ineffectual leadership: the rating agencies have emerged from the financial crisis with little credit, and reform may strip them further of their influence
Feeling the squeeze
Editor's Letter
Legal spotlight
The global nature of the financial crisis has led to an unprecedented spirit of co-operation amongst securities regulators in different jurisdictions, says Robert Brownlie
Gary Jenkins: Turner's blank canvas
The FSA's chairman, Lord Turner, has published his much-anticipated recommendations for a shake-up of the regulatory system. Do they go far enough?
Reasons to be cheerful
Comment
In thrall to the exchequer
Banks have accepted the bailout cash, but will this Faustian pact come back to haunt them?
Column: Robin Keck
Vulture funds, or distressed debt funds as they would prefer you call them, are seeing a wealth of opportunities in the current trying conditions. So why aren't more funds being raised?
Collateral damage
Editor's letter
A real world stress test
Editor's letter
Column: Robin Keck
Recently redundant? Don't fret: a few positive steps could soon see you back in the market
We're all Swensenians now
The appeal of commodities used to be the equity-like returns combined with low correlation to stocks and bonds. That all changed once the commodities bandwagon started rolling
A silver lining for quants
Salaries might be flat at best compared with 2007 but quants' unique skillsets are in demand
A new 'information age' for credit
Credit Crisis