Financial sector disregards human rights, NGO claims
The financial sector needs to pay more attention to human rights in its activities, especially in its supply chains, a Luxembourg NGO said in a report it presented this week. Industry representatives said the criticism does not yet fully consider new legal requirements that recently entered into force.
Draghi’s promise is at stake
President Biden and Olaf Scholz, the new German Chancellor, are not on the same page regarding Nordstream 2. Biden threatens that no natural gas will flow through the pipeline if Russia invades Ukraine. But for Germany, Moscow is much closer and Scholz will realise that 40 percent of all natural gas in Europe comes from Russia.
Unlike the Netherlands, Germany is actually switching to natural gas, away from lignite and oil boilers. Meanwhile in Moscow, Macron is trying to de-escalate the issue, if only for the upcoming French elections.
Luxembourg opens up for active management of debt pools
The Chambre des Députés, Luxembourg’s parliament, on Wednesday approved a long-awaited modernisation of the Grand Duchy’s securitisation law that will enable fund managers to actively manage pooled debts such as corporate loans and mortgages.
PGIM Investments: 2022 Investment Themes: An Uncharted Path To Normal
PGIM asset managers assess the current investment landscape, key trends shaping 2022, and ideas for investors seeking alpha.
JP Morgan AM applies AI to find climate, biodiversity solutions
J.P. Morgan Asset Management is stepping up its use of artificial intelligence in order to identify companies that provide solutions in the fight against climate change and loss of biodiversity. The US asset manager wants to use AI to find between 50 and 100 companies in which investors can invest through its climate solutions fund.
Morningstar: 'Green' funds to outpace 'grey' by mid-2022
European mutual funds that promote green investments saw assets increase by some 22 percent in the fourth quarter, to more than 4,000 billion euro, and will overtake traditional ‘grey’ assets in terms of asset volume no later than the summer of 2022, Morningstar said in a research report on the effects of the SFDR sustainability regulation introduced last year.
Morningstar - Untangled: The EU's ESG Benchmark Rules
In nutshell, the EU Benchmark Regulation (EU 2016/2011) has been amended on two fronts.
Avoiding dry powder involves choosing complex investments
Record levels of funds invested into private asset strategies has led to the phenomenon of “too much dry powder” in which new investments fuel higher entry valuations for the slower-growing number of underlying investment opportunities. Nils Rode, Schroders Capital’s Chief Investment Officer, explained that avoiding this involves locating successful investments, those that benefit from a “complexity premium”, as private assets move into a new phase.
Schroders: Will EM be left with a hangover as the Fed drains the punch bowl?
We explain the risks to emerging markets from prospective US Federal Reserve quantitative tightening.
Luxembourg home to nearly half of Europe’s ESG assets
Luxembourg retained its lead last year as the biggest global hub for sustainable investment funds. Nearly half of all ESG assets in Europe now have a home in Luxembourg, according to LFF, while the appeal of the Luxembourg Green Exchange continues to grow.