Gramegna calls for single rulebook in EU financial markets

Pierre Gramegna, former Luxembourg finance minister and managing director of the European Stability Mechanism, on Tuesday called for bolder steps towards creating better integrated financial markets in Europe. Reviving the EU’s ambition for creating a true Capital Markets Union is essential, he said, if Europe wants to broaden access to finance for businesses and achieve its sustainability ambitions.

EU retail investment strategy launch delayed to end May

The presentation of the European Commission’s long-awaited retail investment strategy, has now been delayed once more, from an early May to a tentatively scheduled 24 May date, according to a person familiar with the policymaking process in Brussels.

In Luxembourg, the financial sector is concerned about whether the Commission will opt for a ban on inducements on investment advice as part of its strategy.

Efama: Eltif 2.0 contains solutions to liquidity issues

Europe’s fund and asset management organisation Efama, active in the development of the updated European long-term investment fund, expressed  strong optimism this week about the updated vehicle’s interest to both professional and retail investors and its ability to fulfill its Capital Market Union aspirations.

Despite early questioning of its ability to provide sufficient liquidity to attract retail investors, Efama’s expert detailed how the legislation provides several tools that afford liquidity solutions.

Fese, Efama lock horns over consolidated tape

With the endorsement of almost all European stock exchanges, the “consolidated tape” recently booked significant progress. Hurdles remains however, as representatives of stock exchanges and asset managers remain at loggerheads. “Europe risks missing the boat on this entire issue of really getting market structure right,” FESE’s director general Rainer Riess told Investment Officer.

The EU’s Capital Markets Union: ready for the next push

It’s been nearly a decade since the European Commission set out its ambitious plans for a Capital Markets Union (CMU), diversifying sources of funding in Europe’s economy. Progress so far has been slow and Brussels now has conceded it needs help to persuade member states and its citizens of its merits before it can make another push

In Flux: Europe’s own SEC

Luxembourg loves the new new thing, especially when it comes to financial legislation. The big question is: what should be next? The Grand Duchy may have found the answer already.

In the late 1980s, the Grand Duchy successfully tapped into global investment fund markets by becoming the first EU member state to offer Ucits-passports to international investment funds. Today, three decades later, more than a quarter of Europe’s fund assets has its home here. The country has even become a leading global funds hub.