This book explores the future of the financial services industry, giving readers an idea of the kinds of institutions and services that will survive in the early twenty-first century. * * An informative and provocative exploration of the future of the financial services industry. * Focuses on likely changes in the near future, such as greater use of the Internet for banking transactions and the increasing globalization of financial services. * Points to the probable disappearance of the insurance sector as a separate industry. * Describes changing conditions in key financial centres, especially the US, the UK, Germany, Japan and Switzerland.
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"Robert Grosse shows that, despite the internet, most financialservices are still delivered locally; indeed the world's largestinternational financial institutions (such as Allianz and MerrillLynch) are leaders in their home markets but are not true globalleaders. He also shows that, in retail banking, the performance ofcommercial banks is strongly determined by the growth of their homemarkets." Alan Rugman, Indiana University
"In this important book Robert Grosse shows that, despite theinternet, there are few globally active financial institutions andthat there are no truly global competitors. Most financial servicesare still delivered locally: as a notable example, in retailbanking the performance of commercial banks is stongly determinedby the growth of their home markets. The future of financialservices will be local rather than global." Alan Rugman, KelleySchool of Business
"In this important book Robert Grosse shows that, despite theinternet, there are few globally active financial institutions andthat there are no truly global competitors. Most financial servicesare still delivered locally: as a notable example, in retailbanking the performance of commercial banks is stongly determinedby the growth of their home markets. The future of financialservices will be local rather than global." Alan Rugman, KelleySchool of Business