‘Private markets have reached an inflection point’
The upcoming arrival of retail investors in private markets, combined with economic headwinds and the need for technological innovation, have placed all private asset classes at an inflection point from where institutional parties need to make significant investments in efficiency, technology and skills, said a State Street report released on Monday.
AXA IM: Turning threats into opportunities - choose biodiversity for long term growth
Governments and regulators around the globe now recognise that immediate, quantifiable action on a large scale is needed to preserve the future of our planet.
PGIM webinar: Building portfolios with the best ideas in global credit
Join us on Monday 22nd May at 15:00, where Richard Piccirillo, Senior Portfolio Manager at PGIM Fixed Income, will identify credit sector opportunities and discuss the team’s best ideas in today’s volatile markets.
Chart of the Week: Look beyond inflation
The money supply is rapidly shrinking, something that rarely, if ever, happens. In the United States, the money supply is shrinking by more than 4 per cent on an annual basis. And while there is an endless debate whether you should look mainly at the money supply or the money supply, as far as I am concerned, the latter is the most important.
‘We look for stable businesses’
Claus Vorm, senior portfolio manager and deputy head of multi assets at Nordea Asset Management, underlines the importance of choosing companies with predictable and stable prospects over time, which deliver superior and less volatile performance. Without investing in energy, his 100 per cent equity fund managed to achieve a near break-even result in 2022.
‘Biodiversity credits needed to bridge $824 bln gap’
Current efforts to address global biodiversity loss are inadequate and face a financing gap of between 598 billion and 824 billion dollars per year, a new study has concluded. To address this gap, governments and businesses need to support the introduction of ‘biodiversity credit markets’, to be modelled in a manner similar to the carbon credit markets that already exist.
Degroof Petercam operating result declines 16%
Referring to a “challenging year”, Belgian investment house Degroof Petercam on Saturday said that its operating income fell 16 per cent last year on the back of a decline in commission income. The drop was mitigated in part by higher interest margins.
The bank, which has a major presence in Luxembourg as asset manager, posted 106.7 million euro in operating income for 2022, down from 126.6 million a year earlier. The privately held company did not provide a breakdown of this income.
André Bauler rapporteur for funds law reform
André Bauler, member of the Luxembourg parliament for the Democratic Party, on Friday was appointed by the parliament’s finance and budget committee to coordinate the different political positions for the upcoming discussions on a proposal to update the grand duchy’s investment fund laws.
Bruno Colmant sees end of ‘so-called neo-liberalism’
Bruno Colmant, former CEO at Degroof Petercam, spoke in Luxembourg this week as a member of Belgium’s Royal Academy. Addressing an audience of bankers and real estate professionals he laid out his views on the impact of increased public spending linked to fighting “systemic risks” in Europe. “We are closer to a communist state than to a free market economy.”
Luxembourg’s financial sector set for wider adoption of AI
Although usage of artificial intelligence in the Luxembourg financial sector is currently fairly limited and still at an early stage, the grand duchy is set for wider adoption of artificial intelligence in the near future, according to a survey carried out by BCL, the central bank, and financial supervisor CSSF.