Alongside the glossy adverts for Tag

Alongside the glossy adverts for Tag Heuer watches, Jaguar motor cars and Crockett & Jones shoes, the magazine trawls traditional lad's mag territory, with stories about gadgets, clothes and alcohol.The opening issue boasts as its editorial centrepiece an interview with perhaps the most infamous trader of them all, Nick Leeson, now living and working in the Republic of Ireland.But there are also features that might struggle to appeal to many outside the confines of the Square Mile. "'See it, make it, spend it' encapsulates that lifestyle, from stories about who else is making money and advice on how to make more yourself to how to spend it on the best, wildest and most decadent stuff out there."Flicking through the opening edition's 124 testosterone-fuelled pages, there is certainly no shortage of aspirational content. The magazine aims to peddle a mixture of profiles and hints from the big players in the European financial markets and offer help to those lesser mortals who aspire, in Tom Wolfe's Bonfire of the Vanities, to "become masters of the universe".According Mr Greaves, the magazine's founder, who first stood on the floor of the London International Financial Futures Exchange market at the age of 19, trading is more than a job "It is a lifestyle, a culture," he said. But nearly two decades later, the spirit of those febrile times looks to be alive and kicking.

Cond?ast is launching a magazine today aimed at Europe's traders under the slogan "See it, make it, spend it". Trader Monthly, the brainchild of the Canadian-born financial whizz-kid Magnus Greaves, bills itself as a "strategy and lifestyle publication intended for professional traders and hedge fund managers". It has been on sale for a year in the US. In the UK it will retail at £10 per issue - a snip to workers in an industry where annual bonuses often exceed £1m. Some reports suggest the two will be back together soon, possibly even staging a romantic reunion at the home of one of their showbiz friends. Whatever happens, Moss looks set to remain firmly in the limelight.The new edition of Vanity Fair will be on sale from Friday.. It may not have the primordial force of Gordon Gecko's declaration in the film Wall Street to stockholders of the ailing Teldar Paper company, that "greed, for lack of a better word, is good". She is reported to be moving to the Cotswolds with her three-year-old daughter, Lila Grace, after selling her north London home.

French Vogue is said to be going ahead with plans to feature her in next month's issue and she is also booked for a slot as a guest editor.But there remains one big unknown - her relationship with Doherty. Although she could still be interviewed by police in connection with the drug-taking allegations, she is said to have emerged from the Meadows clinic in Arizona - described as a level one psychiatric acute hospital - with an "unremitting" timetable of therapy and meditation, "harder, tougher and more ruthless than she's ever been".So the future for Moss could be looking brighter than it did this time last month. Julie Belcove, the magazine's deputy editor, said: "It has always been Moss's complexity.. that has made her so compelling to look at. Whether it's also the source of her troubles is impossible to know.

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