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Banks struggle in their search for biodiversity funds

Banks are keen to invest more in biodiversity but experience difficulties in finding suitable products. The concept of biodiversity is stretched and providers do not make sufficiently clear what goals they are pursuing and how these are measured. 

Sustainability regulations require asset managers and banks to take into account a number of factors on which they must also report. A large part of it deals with biodiversity, giving the topic great attention from banks and asset managers as well as from providers. 

Apex snaps up troubled MJ Hudson in £40 mln firesale

Bermuda-headquartered financial services firm Apex Group, one of the largest management companies in Luxembourg, has agreed to acquire MJ Hudson PLC, a troubled London-listed provider of management company services in Ireland and Luxembourg, for about 40 million pounds (45.2 million euro), less than half its value at the time of its 2019 IPO.

Chart of the week: looking past the elephant in the room

The workings of financial markets never cease to amaze from time to time. Especially when they decide to systematically deny the elephant in the room. Equity investors are often blamed for this behaviour, but high-yield investors can also have some of it at the moment. 

If there is anything consensus after the demise of Silicon Valley Bank, it is surely that the outflow of bank deposits is leading to tighter lending requirements. Not least because loan-to-deposit ratios have increased.

Reverse hybrid rules playing major role in funds

The Luxembourg government clarified its application of the reverse hybrid rule in the EU’s second anti-tax avoidance directive (ATAD-2) last November, in 2022. It made clear that tax-exempt investors are exempt from the application of the reverse hybrid rules and clarified when they do apply to other investors. With the “quite helpful” clarification bringing simplification in one area, the quest for certainty has moved to related issues, such as allocating the potential tax burden if a given investor triggers it.

No policy needed on Reifs: market experts respond to ECB proposal

A recent European Central Bank study calling for a regulatory framework to address instability in the market for Real Estate Investment Funds, known as Reifs, has been downplayed by a growing number of real estate specialists contacted by Investment Officer in Luxembourg and London.