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Books > Business & Economics > Economics > International economics > International finance
Trade and Receivable Finance provides the definitive practical
guide to the evaluation and mitigation of risk and the financing of
international trade. This authoritative manual is built upon more
than 42 years of experience in the trade and receivables finance
market and carries the endorsement of The London Institute of
Banking and Finance. The contents are comprehensive incorporating
clause examples, specimen documents, financier checklists and
diagrams. The traditional method of commercial lending assessment
places primary importance on the ability of the borrower to repay
the financier. However, this form of evaluation often results in
insufficient credit appetite to release the required level of
financial support for a company involved in cross border trade.
When a trade-related proposition is properly evaluated so that the
transactional risks are fully understood and mitigated to an
acceptable level, and the source of repayment is identifiable and
considered reliable, a well-structured trade and receivables
finance facility reduces the risk of default when compared to
conventional lending products and can generate additional credit
appetite. This book will become a constant 'go-to' companion for
transaction banking teams, bank relationship managers, specialist
client-facing trade and invoice finance specialists, middle and
back office trade advisory personnel, credit analysts, alternative
market financiers, export development agencies and credit insurers.
The techniques described in this book are applied to an extensive
range of international trade scenarios inThe Trade and Receivables
Finance Companion: A Collection of Case Studies and Solutions
(Palgrave, 2020).
Experts from economics, finance, law, policy, and banking discuss
the design and implementation of a future capital market union in
Europe. The plan for further development of Europe's economic and
monetary union foresees the creation of a capital market union
(CMU)-a single market for capital in the entire Eurozone. The need
for citizens and firms of all European countries to have access to
funding, together with the pressure to improve the efficiency and
risk-sharing opportunities of the financial system in general, put
the CMU among the top priorities on the Eurozone's agenda. In this
volume, leading academics in economics, finance, and law, along
with policy makers and practitioners, discuss the design and
implementation of a future CMU. Contributors describe the key
design challenges of the CMU; specific opportunities and obstacles
for reaching the CMU's goals of increasing the economic well-being
of households and the profitability and viability of firms; the
role that markets-from the latest fintech developments to
traditional equity markets-can play in the future success of CMU;
and the institutional framework needed for CMU in the aftermath of
the global recession. Contributors Sumit Agarwal, Franklin Allen,
Valentina Allotti, Gene Amromin, John Armour, Geert Bekaert, Itzhak
Ben-David, Marcello Bianchi, Lorenzo Bini-Smaghi, Claudio Borio,
Franziska Bremus, Marina Brogi, Claudia M. Buch, Giacomo Calzolari,
Souphala Chomsisengphet, Luca Enriques, Douglas D. Evanoff, Ester
Faia, Eilis Ferran, Jeffrey N. Gordon, Michael Haliassos, Campbell
R. Harvey, Kathryn Judge, Suzanne Kalss, Valentina Lagasio, Katya
Langenbucher, Christian T. Lundblad, Massimo Marchesi, Alexander
Michaelides, Stefano Micossi, Emanuel Moench, Mario Nava, Giorgio
Barba Navaretti, Giovanna Nicodano, Gianmarco Ottaviano, Marco
Pagano, Monica Paiella, Lubos Pastor, Alain Pietrancosta, Richard
Portes, Alberto Franco Pozzolo, Stephan Siegel, Wolfe-Georg Ringe,
Diego Valiante
The International Management Reader: Essential Articles on Global
Business provides students with a hands-on approach to
understanding the impacts and nuances of global factors such as
governmental regulations, social-cultural trends, language,
religion, economic activities, ethical behavior, and
decision-making on a company's strategies to do business outside of
its home market. The book features 14 chapters with each presenting
a key topic on doing business globally. Each chapter includes an
introduction, pre-reading questions, an article, post-reading
questions, and a summary of important takeaways. Students learn
about potential barriers to expanding business in a new country,
the positive and negative impacts of governmental policies on
global business, the importance of researching cultural factors
when interacting with international clients and investors, and the
critical roles of strategic planning and risk consideration.
Additional chapters address global entry strategies, corporate
citizenship, and the positive and negative aspects of an
international career. Developed to showcase the myriad
opportunities available to students in global management and to
provide them with the foundational knowledge they require within
the field, The International Management Reader is an exemplary
resource for courses in global business.
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