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1. China's call for more clout; top banker says the way to China is a two-way street

2. Leaders will back U.S. on banks; nations support broad financial rules but disagree on how to adopt them

3. China bank regulator urges global treaty

4. Tough bank rules coming; global group prepares to limit risk-taking; cost of loans could rise

5. Market view: more smiles, wary on growth; survey of global money managers tells a story of optimistic, if cautious, sentiment about stock-market prospects

6. China cools growth despite market worry

7. World races to avert Europe crisis; $955 billion bailout plan for euro members is crafted; ECB intervenes in bond markets; Fed reopens a rescue program

8. EU hedge-fund dispute heats up; Schumer threatens retaliation if EU blocks U.S. money managers from European markets

9. Investors bet Greece won't spill; Central and Eastern European markets are beneficiaries as favor shifts toward riskier assets

10. Emerging opportunities after correction

11. Coordination needed; financial-industry group cites risks of mismatched governmental reforms

12. China hits brakes on economic stimulus; central bank raises required reserve levels as Beijing takes aim at inflation, bubbles; markets shudder around the globe

13. Turbulence marks global outlook for 2010; among issues to watch -- a renewed fight against terror, the surge in Afghanistan, trade with China and mounting debt

14. Recovery hopes stir markets; Australian rate rise spurs stock, commodity rallies; gold hits record as dollar falls

15. G-20 reality check; an awareness that stimulus has limits

16. International cooperation is the way out of the financial crisis

17. Paulson seeks to broaden access to China

18. Global push to revive economy; Europeans slash interest rates, Democrats ready fresh stimulus as outlook darkens

19. Stocks look cheap world-wide; valuations are now at a level that appears equivalent to the 1970s

20. Financial storm hits Gulf; speculative currency trades plunge Kuwait into bank bailout

21. Fresh tumult as signs of recession go global

22. Tumult touches emerging nations; borrowing costs balloon for markets depending on foreign capital

23. Markets fall as fears of slump span world; currencies in turmoil; Dow nears its 5-year low

24. Europe adds to bank plans in bid to blunt likely recession

25. Rethinking capitalism's contours; summits will address financial crisis, but divide looms between U.S. and EU

26. Europeans step up bank bailout

27. Global bank rules draw resistance; U.S., Japan and business groups not signed on to U.K.'s cross-border proposals

28. EU to push global oversight of top financial firms; leaders at summit seize momentum of European response to crisis; Sarkozy says he can get U.S. and China on board

29. While the world is listening, Brown touts global oversight

30. Latin America can weather the storm

31. For BRIC consumers, pain from the West builds; big emerging economies are slowing and may not be able to pick up the slack; India's retailers brace for tough times

32. A crash heard around the world; as investors flee danger zones, reverberations are creating more of them, further darkening the global outlook

33. Reality reaches Latin America; once-sheltered economies feel pain as commodities weaken, credit freezes

34. Europe raises the stakes in bank bailout race; U.K. to rescue RBS, HBOS, as Germany plans up to E400 billion to aid its institutions; U.S. is considering similar moves

35. Stock markets in Latin America plunge again

36. Eastern Europe feels heat from meltdown

37. British negotiators head to Iceland; Brown says U.K. to do what is necessary to recover the money' from bank failures

38. Russia tries speeding aid for markets, but investors don't seem impressed

39. Germany readies bailout; in reversal, Berlin considers plan to inject capital into banks

40. G-7 leaders agree on guidelines to confront crisis, but no joint plan

41. Asia has cash amid crisis-but caution, inexperience limit clout

42. Europe's panic

43. Europe races to shore up banks as crisis spreads

44. U.S., Europe push to limit crisis; White House considers boost to deposit insurance' stocks rebound on bailout hopes

45. ECB is likely to hold the line on rates despite market turmoil

46. China cuts key rates amid strains

47. The Street's rush into far frontiers offers big game and bigger risks

48. Inflation's bite worsens around world; China, Vietnam show fresh stress; bond investors bet Fed may raise U.S. rates

49. Plunge in Indian stocks highlights how market still is coupled to U.S.; Sensex is down 21% in '08 amid signs of short-term woes

50. Banks fear a deepening of turmoil

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