BLI’s Wagner to focus as CIO as Nosetti named CEO
BLI - Banque de Luxembourg Investments on Thursday said that it has appointed Fanny Nosetti (photo) as chief executive officer. The appointment means that Guy Wagner now can “focus entirely” on his role as chief investment officer, managing the firm’s flagship, 1.8 billion euro BL Global Flexible Euro fund and continuing to refine the investment approach he has developed with his teams. Since 2005 Wagner served both as CEO and CIO.
Luxembourg Raif issuance up 36% in H1, Waystone lead issuer
Growth in funds registered as Reserved Alternative Investment Funds, known as Raifs, in Luxembourg has increased considerably in the first half of this year , according to an analysis of data from the Luxembourg Business Registry by Investment Officer Luxembourg.
Luxempart posts €55.4 mln loss in ‘extremely choppy’ H1
Luxempart, a Luxembourg-listed investment and private equity company, has posted a consolidated net loss of 55.4 million euro for the first half as its investment income was hit by “extremely choppy” conditions in financial markets and the economy.
The loss compares to a profit of 499 million euros in the same period a year earlier. The firm said it maintained its net assets at 2.078 billion euros by the end of June, down slightly from from 2.169 billion a year earlier.
‘Cheap money at ECB makes fighting inflation difficult’
The European Central Bank needs to review its special programmes that make available cheap money to banks in Europe in order to become more effective in fighting inflation, Banque de France governor François Villeroy de Galhau told central bankers at their meeting in Jackson Hole.
Swiss central bank is proud of its narrow mandate
Central banks worldwide will need to face the fact that pressure on prices will remain high for the coming years and that inflation dynamics will continue to be clouded by uncertainty, Switzerland’s central bank chief has told his colleagues in Jackson Hole. The Swiss central bank also prides itself in working with a narrow mandate that is not influenced by political considerations.
‘Green shorting’ emerges as new phenomenon in State Street study
A recent study conducted by Boston-based State Street has found evidence of “green shorting”, a phenomenon in financial markets where investors borrow shares of companies with a weak sustainability profile and sell them in the hope they can buy them back cheaper when the price declines.
Ethenea’s Siviero sees Swiss franc, yen as safe havens
With a recession looming in Europe, investors again are on the lookout for suitable safe havens. Ethenea’s investment strategist Andrea Siviero, who manages the firm’s 60-million-euro Hesper Fund - Global Solutions together with Federico Frischknecht, believes the Swiss franc and the Japanese yen are well placed to take up this role, as the Fund has1a position in December 2023 Euribor futures that anticipates the ECB won’t be able to raise rates next year as much as currently discounted by the market.
‘EU sustainability reporting rules need global alignment’
Global asset managers are concerned that the European Union’s regime for corporate sustainability reporting does not fully match their needs and that it could risk making Europe less attractive for international investors as the rules remain to be aligned with an alternative international approach that is gaining traction in international accounting discussions in the IFRS community.
UK debt collector Arrow opens Luxembourg office
Manchester-based distressed debt trader Arrow Global Limited has announced it is opening an office in Luxembourg in order to benefit from the Grand Duchy’s position as a global investment fund hub and to put in place “the optimum infrastructure” to support investment strategies for its debt funds.
ECB commits to more assertive defence of eurozone cohesion
While closing the door on a seven-year era of negative interest rates with a larger than anticipated rate hike, the European Central Bank on Thursday committed itself to a more assertive defence of cohesion between the 19 economies that use the euro. President Christine Lagarde described the move as “a rather historical moment”.