‘Biodiversity credits needed to bridge $824 bln gap’
Current efforts to address global biodiversity loss are inadequate and face a financing gap of between 598 billion and 824 billion dollars per year, a new study has concluded. To address this gap, governments and businesses need to support the introduction of ‘biodiversity credit markets’, to be modelled in a manner similar to the carbon credit markets that already exist.
Degroof Petercam operating result declines 16%
Referring to a “challenging year”, Belgian investment house Degroof Petercam on Saturday said that its operating income fell 16 per cent last year on the back of a decline in commission income. The drop was mitigated in part by higher interest margins.
The bank, which has a major presence in Luxembourg as asset manager, posted 106.7 million euro in operating income for 2022, down from 126.6 million a year earlier. The privately held company did not provide a breakdown of this income.
Luxembourg to encourage Eltif uptake with tax exemption
Luxembourg’s finance minister has tabled a proposal to the grand duchy’s parliament to encourage the uptake of European long-term investment funds known as Eltifs. If adopted, the proposal will exempt Eltifs from requiring to pay the quarterly registration tax levied on Luxembourg investment funds.
At least 20 new Luxembourg Eltif funds expected this year
Lawyers in Luxembourg expect that at least 20 new European long-term investment funds, known as Eltifs, will be registered in the grand duchy this year, even before the more liberal regulatory regime for these funds enters into force in 2024, researchers at Scope Fund Analysis said.
Eltifs grew more than 50 percent last year into a 11.3 billion euro market, also buoyed by 4 billion euro in inflows. More than half of the 77 Eltifs available were registered in Luxembourg, according to the latest Eltif study by Scope Fund Analysis.
EU warns climate insurance gap must be bridged
The European Central Bank and the EU’s top insurance body have warned that businesses and households are not sufficiently insured against climate-related disasters, raising the risk of financial instability and economic crises. A discussion paper issued this week argued that catastrophe bonds should play a bigger role in bridging the overall climate insurance gap, while national and European authorities need to encourage uptake of policies to prevent such crises from occurring.
Luxembourg stock exchange expands cooperation with Macao
The Luxembourg stock exchange has announced a new move to expand its cooperation with Macao, one of China’s Special Administrative Regions. The bourse said it will offer trading in securities listed on the Chongwa (Macao) Financial Asset Exchange Co. Ltd., commonly known as MOX, on its self-regulated Euro MTF market.
Luxembourg raid probes AC Milan fraud claim
In a dawn raid on Friday, Luxembourg judicial authorities searched for documents of two holding companies controlled by US hedge fund Elliott Management in relation to last year’s 1.2 billion euro sale of Italian football club AC Milan. Although it has formally closed, the sale is still contested by a third Luxembourg holding company, Blue Skye Financial Partners, which owned a small minority stake in AC Milan and which claims it has fallen victim to fraud under Luxembourg law.
Apex snaps up troubled MJ Hudson in £40 mln firesale
Bermuda-headquartered financial services firm Apex Group, one of the largest management companies in Luxembourg, has agreed to acquire MJ Hudson PLC, a troubled London-listed provider of management company services in Ireland and Luxembourg, for about 40 million pounds (45.2 million euro), less than half its value at the time of its 2019 IPO.
Eltifs have a US parent: the Business Development Company
If there’s one thing clear from recent months, it’s that Luxembourg is placing a major bet on the future of Eltifs, or European Long Term Investment Funds. The EU’s adoption of a major upgrade of the Eltif regulation is opening the doors to private markets for high-net-worth investors and wealth management clients.
Decalia’s Vettasseri: Paradigm shift requires innovation
Rising interest rates and the demise of Silicon Valley Bank and Credit Suisse have led to a paradigm shift in private equity and venture capital. Reji Vettasseri, lead portfolio manager at Swiss private finance group Decalia, believes investors now need to to be innovative with emerging strategies, carefully selecting ‘small cap’ firms to invest in instead of fleeing to the safety of larger ventures.