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PART I EMERGING MARKETS. |
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1 Country Classification: Principles and Practice. |
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1.1 Definition and Scope. |
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1.2 Emerging Markets: ‘Symptoms’ and Similarities. |
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1.3 Sink or Swim: The Evolution of Emerging Markets. |
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1.3.3 The 1950s and 1960s. |
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1.3.4 The 1970s and 1980s. |
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1.4 Emerging Markets: The Potential. |
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2 Emerging Markets: The Twin Crisis – Bank Crisis and Country Crisis. |
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2.1 Bank Crisis and Country Crisis. |
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2.2 The Twin Crisis and its Costs. |
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2.3 Bank Crisis and Country Crisis: Major Underlying Factors. |
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3 Emerging Markets: The Culture Outline. |
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3.1 Culture and Importance of Culture in Business. |
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3.2 Different Dimensions of Culture. |
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3.3 Cultural Code in Some Countries. |
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4 The Major Emerging Markets – BRICT: Brazil, Russia, India, China and Turkey. |
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4.1.2 Banking System in Brazil. |
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4.2.2 Banking System in Russia. |
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4.3.2 Banking System in India. |
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4.4.2 Banking System in China. |
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4.5.2 Banking System in Turkey. |
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5 Sovereign Rating and Country Risk. |
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5.1 Country Risk: Definition and its Importance. |
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5.2 Sovereign Default: History and Consequence. |
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5.3 Country Risk Rating Principles. |
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5.3.3 Institutional Investor. |
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5.4 Limitations of Country Risk Rating. |
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5.5 Country Risk Evaluation in Practice. |
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5.5.1 Country Risk Credit Committee. |
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5.5.2 Techniques for Country Risk Assessment. |
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5.6 Recent Cases of Country Crisis in Emerging Markets. |
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5.6.1 The Russian Financial Crisis of August 1998. |
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5.6.2 The Financial Crisis in Argentina. |
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5.6.3 The Financial Crisis in Mexico. |
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5.6.5 Country Crisis: Signs and Signals. |
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PART II INSTITUTIONAL BANKING. |
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6 From Correspondent Banking to Institutional Banking: Past and Present. |
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6.1 The Origin of Correspondent Banking. |
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6.2 The Influence from the General Development of the Banking Industry. |
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6.3 Correspondent Banking Today: Towards an Institutional Relationship. |
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7 The Products of Institutional Banking. |
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7.1 Account Service and Cash Management. |
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7.2.1 Shareholder Structure. |
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7.3.1 Various Ways to Finance Trade. |
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7.4 Financial Market and/or Investment Bank Products. |
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8 The Marketing Function of Institutional Banking. |
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8.1 Marketing Strategy: Market Segmentation. |
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8.2 Marketing Approaches. |
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8.2.2 Regular Visit to Correspondent Banks. |
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8.2.3 Senior Level Meetings. |
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8.2.4 Work-together on Joint Projects. |
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8.3 Marketing Principles. |
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8.3.2 Earnings Motivation: ‘Profit Sharing’. |
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8.3.3 Complementary Relationship. |
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9 The Risk Management Function of Institutional Banking. |
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9.1 Bank Risk Evaluation. |
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9.2 Privileges for Banks: Deposit Insurance. |
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9.3 Bank Evaluation Framework. |
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9.4 Bank Rating and Its Limitations. |
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9.4.1 Bank Rating Methodology. |
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9.4.2 Bank Rating Limitations. |
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9.4.3 Evaluation of Banks: The Practice. |
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9.5 Bank Failures and Bank Crisis. |
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9.5.1 Bank Crisis: The Concept. |
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9.5.2 Bank Crisis: Signs and Signals. |
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9.5.3 Bank Analysis Format. |
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10 Institutional Banking and Institutional Banking Department. |
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10.1 The Institutional Banking Department. |
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10.2 The Roles for the Institutional Banking Department: An Account Manager, a Risk Manager or a Relationship Manager. |
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10.3 The Centralized VS Decentralized Pattern. |
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10.4 The Evaluation of the Performance of the Institutional Banking Department. |
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10.5 Human Resource Issues for the Institutional Banking Department. |
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11 Institutional Banking: Fraud Prevention, Anti-money Laundering and Basel II. |
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11.1.2 Fraud of Forged Bank Papers. |
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11.1.3 Fraud in Trade Finance. |
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11.2 Money Laundering and Terrorism Financing. |
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11.3 Anti-Money Laundering Initiatives. |
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11.4 Basel II and its Implications to Institutional Banking. |
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PART III INSTITUTIONAL BANKING FOR EMERGING MARKETS: PRODUCT MARKETING, RISK MANAGEMENT, RISK MITIGATION and PROBLEM SOLVING. |
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12 Characteristics of Institutional Banking for Emerging Markets. |
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12.3 Nature of Relationship. |
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12.5 Culture Sensitivity. |
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13 Specialized Finance for Emerging Markets. |
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13.1.3 Products/Product Structure. |
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13.1.4 International Network. |
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13.2.3 Products/Product Structure. |
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13.2.4 International Network. |
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13.3.3 Products/Product Structure. |
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13.3.4 International Network. |
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14 Marketing for Emerging Markets. |
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14.1 Understanding the Culture and Banking Practice for Counterparties. |
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14.2 Understanding the Needs of Your Institutional Clients. |
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14.2.1 Cheap Funding for Liquidity Purposes. |
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14.2.2 Banking Know-how: Specialists and Skills. |
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14.3 The Price Issue in Marketing for Institutional Banking. |
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14.4 The Product Issue in Marketing for Emerging Markets. |
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15 Risk Management for Emerging Markets. |
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15.1 Risk Management and Institutional Banking. |
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15.2 ‘Stop-go Policy: A Dilemma? |
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15.3 Principles of Risk Management. |
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15.3.1 Asset-backed Finance and Balance Sheet Finance. |
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15.3.2 Debt Finance and Equity Finance. |
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15.3.3 Financial Risk and Operational Risk. |
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15.3.4 Short-term and Long-term Finance. |
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15.4 Country Risk Management: Country Limit and its Related Issues. |
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15.5 Country Risk Management: Country Risk Registration. |
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15.6 Bank Risk Management: Bank Limit and its Related Issues. |
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16 Risk Mitigation for Emerging Markets. |
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16.1 Risk Mitigation: Principles and Practice. |
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16.2 Structured Mitigation: Practical Cases. |
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16.3 International Mitigation – Risk Cover by National and Multilateral Financial Institutions for Development. |
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16.4 Market Mitigation: Political Risk Insurance. |
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16.5 Country Risk Solutions – Handling Distressed Sovereign Debt for Emerging Markets. |
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16.5.2 Debt Rescheduling. |
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16.5.3 Debt Sale and Debt Collection. |
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16.6 Bank Risk Solution: Risk Participation. |
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16.6.1 Risk Participation and Syndication. |
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16.6.2 Risk Participation and Reciprocity of Institutional Banking. |
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16.6.3 Risk Participation Master Agreement. |
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16.6.4 Risk Participation Procedure. |
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16.7 Other Solutions to Bank Risk. |
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16.8 Tools for Risk Mitigation. |
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16.8.1 Letter of Assignment. |
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16.8.2 Letter of Comfort. |
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17 Problem Solving for Emerging Markets. |
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17.1 Problems: Headaches to Banks. |
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17.3 Negotiation and Counterparty’s Position. |
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17.4 Problem-Solving Framework. |
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17.6 Legal Action as Last Resort. |
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17.7 Problem Solving: Cases. |
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17.7.1 Case 1 Compromise and Face-saving. |
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17.7.2 Case 2 New Lending and ‘Old Debts’. |
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17.7.3 Case 3 General Manager vs Operational Staff. |
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17.7.4 Case 4 Who is Right and Who is Wrong? |
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A Chronology of the Asian Crisis, 1997–1999. |
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9780470030769 |
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