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Switzerland’s Federal Prosecutor has opened an investigation into the state-backed takeover of Credit Suisse by its larger rival UBS. The Bern-based prosecutor is looking into potential breaches of Swiss criminal law by government officials, regulators and executives at the two banks, which agreed an emergency merger last month over the course of a frantic weekend
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Donald Trump’s battle with New York prosecutors has been playing out over American airwaves for months, with the former US president’s allies decrying what they claim is a “political witch-hunt” by a partisan district attorney’s office. From Tuesday, however, the skirmishes that matter will take place inside a dilapidated courtroom in downtown Manhattan, between two
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“A globally active, systemically important bank cannot simply be wound up according to the ‘too big to fail’ plan,” Switzerland’s finance minister said last weekend. “Legally this would be possible. In practice, however, the economic damage would be considerable.” Fresh from crafting the rescue-by-takeover of Credit Suisse, Karin Keller-Sutter identified a clear problem. Bank resolution,
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China launched a review into US chip manufacturer Micron Technology on “national security” grounds, as Beijing retaliates against Washington’s increasing curbs on Chinese access to semiconductor technology. In a statement released late on Friday, the Cyberspace Administration of China said it would review imports of Micron’s products in order to maintain national security, ensure the
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Recharge Industries’ attempt to buy the Britishvolt site is at risk of collapse due to a dispute between the Australian company and administrator EY over a power supply contract signed by the failed battery start-up, according to people familiar with the matter. The Geelong-based business bought Britishvolt’s intellectual property — 23 staff and its prototype
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For more than two years, the Chinese authorities have been cracking down on large parts of the private sector, from indebted property companies to data-sensitive tech groups. The campaign was so intense that prominent tycoons such as internet billionaire Jack Ma sought refuge overseas. But this week, just as China’s entrepreneurs were beginning to look
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