Nomura needs a clean slate

Nomura's insider-trading scandal may have a silver lining: the new management has a chance to clean house and roll back overambitious plans to become a global investment-banking titan

The insider-trading scandal that cost Nomura's top two executives their jobs may have a silver lining: the new management has a chance to clean house and roll back overambitious plans to become a global investment banking titan on the back of 2008's acquisition of businesses from the collapsed Lehman Brothers.

New chief executive Koji Nagai plans to cut costs by a billion dollars, nearly half of that in Europe.

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Jamie Dimon Says Private Credit Is Dangerous—and He Wants JPMorgan to Get In on ItExternal link

Jamie Dimon Says Private Credit Is Dangerous—and He Wants JPMorgan to Get In on It