All IPE articles in November 2008 (Magazine)
View all stories from this issue.
-
Special Report
Long on intentions but short on deliverables
In the first of a series of articles on a new study, Amin Rajan argues that Europe’s pension landscape is not fit for purpose post the credit crisis
-
Special Report
Remuneration in the spotlight
The current market downturn has thrown the apparent mismatch between executive performance and pay into sharp focus. Nina Röhrbein reports
-
Features
The fetters come off
Until now, Sweden’s AP7 has not had the benefit of a level playing field. That is about to change, finds George Coats
-
Features
Tempered optimism across Europe
IPE asked six pension organisations across Europe: ‘How have you been affected by the recent market turmoil?’ Interviews conducted by Nina Röhrbein/Liam Kennedy/George Coats
-
Features
Temperature gauge
One of the many consequences of Lehman Brothers’ collapse just a few long weeks ago was that it highlighted the various counterparty risks to which pension funds and managers are exposed.
-
Features
Riding out the tempest
Although small and new, SEB’s Lithuanian pension fund operation is confident that it will survive the turmoil that is convulsing the financial world. CIO Marijus Kalesinskas tells George Coats why
-
Special Report
HGB gets a facelift
German accounting reform will make book reserve pensions less attractive and will give Pensionsfonds the advantage over CTAs
-
Features
Long stories from the top of Europe
Carolyn Bandel roped up to participate in the Northern Trust Mont Blanc 2008 Challenge, and climbed until there was nowhere else to go
-
-
Special Report
Room at the halfway house
With pan-European pension vehicles a distant vision, simpler cross-border schemes may be the way ahead, finds Gail Moss
-
Features
Pressure to re-bundle
Liam Kennedy concludes that the German version of fiduciary management will look different from its Dutch counterpart
-