Private debt funds top €500 bln amid concerns over ESG caution

The Luxembourg private debt market has reached a new milestone, surpassing 500 billion dollars in assets under management (AuM) according to the 2024 Private Debt Fund Survey, published by KPMG in collaboration with the Association of the Luxembourg Fund Industry (ALFI). The survey reveals a 21.5 percent growth in AuM, reaching 510 billion dollars, continuing its strong upward trajectory despite global market turbulence.

KPMG plans new HQ on current BGL-BNP Paribas site

KPMG Luxembourg announced Wednesday an agreement with developer BPI Real Estate to develop a new headquarters building in Kirchberg for its audit, tax and advisory services activities.

The deal includes developing a new 31,000-square-meter headquarters on the 3.23-hectare site of the Kronos Building. It will incorporate a food court and a co-working space. BPI Real Estate will develop an additional 24,658 square meters for mixed-use purposes.

Gazprom’s Gaz Capital fined by CSSF for late annual report

Luxembourg‘s financial supervisor on Monday said it has slapped a fine of 10,000 euro on a Luxembourg subsidiary of Russian state-owned gas producer Gazprom because it was late in filing its annual report for last year.

Gaz Capital SA is fully controlled by Gazprom and held more than 13 billion euro in total assets at the end of 2021, trade data from Luxembourg shows. The firm posted its annual accounts to Luxembourg’s business register on 27 July, well beyond the deadline of three months within the close of the year.

Private banks in Luxembourg struggle as margins squeezed

Private banks in Luxembourg, especially the smaller ones, are struggling as their margins are squeezed while weak financial markets have not made business any easier this year, it became clear at a press presentation on Friday afternoon, held at the offices of Luxembourg’s bankers’ association ABBL, which presented the results of a new survey. “The important thing is critical mass.”

In Flux: Home of the Super ManCos

Those who see what’s happening in today’s post-Brexit financial world will undoubtedly recognise that Luxembourg is serious about its role as Europe’s back office. 

Luxembourg’s fund industry continues to transform and reinvent itself. Wedged in between Germany, France and Belgium, the country has clearly carved out a position in Europe’s financial services market as a platform where the multijurisdictional and multilingual expertise of its businesses, and the thousands of internationals who work here, can flourish.

Big Four consultancy firms sever ties with Russia

The four leading international consultancy firms, known as the Big Four, have joined a growing list of companies that this week decided to cut their ties with operations in Russia because of the invasion of Ukraine.

PWC, KPMG, Deloitte and Ernst & Young collectively employ some 14.000 staff in Russia. The companies said ties with its Russian business will be severed, letting these operation continue but no longer as part of their networks.

KPMG Luxembourg names Breton, Guertler as partner

KPMG Luxembourg has named Annick Breton and Christian Guertler as partners in its asset management consulting business. They will work closely with Yves Courtois, Head of Advisory and the Advisory Partners group. Both Breton and Guertler have a strong track record in international asset management, KPMG has announced. 

Luxembourg private banking growth outpaces Switzerland 

Private banks in Luxembourg have seen their assets under management double since the 2007-8 financial crisis, according to a survey conducted by KPMG and the Luxembourg Bankers’ Association (ABBL). The report observed that growth at Luxembourg’s private banks in 2020 outpaced growth at their counterparts in Switzerland.

Private banks held 508 billion euro in assets at the end of 2020, up 9 percent from 466 billion euro a year earlier and more than double the 225 billion euro held at the end of 2008.