“…Increasingly decoupled from the surface layer of institutionalized governance, global patterns of capital flows, currency usage, and networks of financial relations are in flux and tracing these changes is equally important for assessing the transformation of the global financial order (Armijo et al., ). Recent research has highlighted that US structural power in global capital markets is largely intact and still counterbalancing the rise of the South (Wade , p. 32, Oatley et al., , p. 148). Yet, we argue that greater financial independence, the increased integration of emerging powers' financial systems, a greater global presence of their multinational corporations (MNCs) and the increasing weight of their banks and other financial entities as financial ‘power brokers' (Subacchi, , p. 493) has the potential to challenge the existing ‘order’ from underneath.…”