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.
No dollar, no crypto, but the e-yuan
The value of a currency is based on trust. The Russian sanctions have not helped the status of Western currencies. Yet crypto currencies also have difficulty escaping Western sanctions. The digital currency issued by China’s central bank, also known as the e-yuan, is succeeding. It may gradually gain market share from the dollar.
Luxembourg freezes 2.5 billion euro in Russian assets
Luxembourg has frozen some 2.5 billion euro in Russian assets, mostly held in shares, bonds and bank accounts, as part of the international sanctions against Russia, its finance minister told a parliamentary committee on Tuesday.
The frozen funds relate to sanctions that have been imposed since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on 24 February and do not consider sanctions that existed beforehand, the minister said.
Luxembourg reluctant to move on Russian oligarchs
Luxembourg has joined the international move to impose sanctions against Russia for its ruthless invasion of Ukraine. It has followed steps taken by other European and global countries and organisations, including condemning Russia’s aggression, even sending some weaponry and equipment to Ukraine’s beleaguered defenders. But there’s one area where Luxembourg appears to be out of step: the high profile application of the sanctions to Russian oligarchic assets held in this country.
Swiss join EU sanctions against Russia
Switzerland, long a place for Russian oligarchs to park their money, announced Monday it would set aside its long-standing and deeply-rooted tradition of neutrality in order to freeze Russian financial assets in the country, as the fast-moving international reaction to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine continues. In so doing, it joined the European Union and a growing list of countries attempting to penalise Russia, as Luxembourg drew its financial sector’s attention to several EU sanctions measures.