In Flux: Singing the Aladdin song at Quintet

Just over one year into his tenure as Chief Executive Officer at Quintet, Chris Allen has unveiled a significant next move for the Luxembourg-headquartered private bank. The partnership he has brokered with BlackRock aims to inspire a fresh way of working in its five main markets, one that respects the nuances of domestic investment cultures.

In Flux: Competition on multiple axes

It is not easy for Luxembourg, home to 5,139 billion euro in international fund assets at the end of April, to maintain its international leadership as cross-border funds centre.

Competition between Luxembourg and Ireland, Europe’s other international funds hub, is a topic that re-emerged on two separate axes this week in our coverage at Investment Officer.lu.

In Flux: Value for money?

Costs of investment funds continue to be a divisive topic in the fund and asset management business. Are investors really paying 40% too much? Or ‘only’ 25%? What are they actually paying for? In Luxembourg, home to a third of Europe’s 30,000 Ucits funds, this discussion could lead to major changes in the coming years, like it already has in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands.

In Flux: It’s like we lost Taiwan, or Canada

The data leaves no doubt about it. This year is a tough one for investors everywhere. It’s very clear in the numbers reported this week, both for Europe and for Luxembourg, the domicile for about 10.000 Ucits funds, about one third of all such funds in Europe. Luxembourg’s loss of total fund value this year now is roughly equivalent to the size of an economy like Taiwan. At a European level, the losses can be compared to an economy the size of Canada.

In Flux: Industry 4.0 as the ‘new Ucits’

In Luxembourg’s financial sector, ‘the new Ucits’ is an informal but widely recognised label that stands for innovation and promising change. It refers to the success of its 1980s investment legislation that offered European passports to Ucits investments funds, sparking a multi-decade boom in the financial sector, turning Luxembourg into Europe’s leading hub for investment funds and replacing the steel industry as the country’s main economic driver.