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Ukraine: elephant in the commodities market room

In periods of low interest rates, high stock market prices and persistent inflation, the usually volatile commodity markets are once again in the sights of investors. This is also the case now, but this time there is another complicating factor: 100,000 Russian soldiers on the border with Ukraine, which the US president expects to invade the neighbouring country.

Top 5 Emerging Markets Equities: Schroders in the lead

2021 was one of the worst calendar years for emerging markets in the last decade, according to senior manager research analyst Ronald van Genderen of Morningstar, in his contribution for this week. Only 2013 saw a (narrowly) bigger loss. That year, the market was hit by concerns about the so-called “taper tantrum”. The situation today is similar, with increasing concerns about rising inflation that may trigger interest rate actions by Western central banks.

Contrarian prefers growth over green concerns

The idea that economic growth is a problem is seriously outdated, according to University of Ghent philosopher Maarten Boudry (photo), He called divestment “nonsense” and advised investors to be wary of “green” funds. “There is a lot of irrationality in these so-called ethical investment choices”, he said.

EU AI startup fund targeting 24% net return

The interest in new funds and alternatives is obvious  from the enthusiasm for a new fund that invests in start-ups in artificial intelligence. 35 investors, including family offices and also the co-founders of BinckBank and Litebit, have together pledged millions to the Curiosity Venture Capital fund launched today.

Luxembourg private banking growth outpaces Switzerland 

Private banks in Luxembourg have seen their assets under management double since the 2007-8 financial crisis, according to a survey conducted by KPMG and the Luxembourg Bankers’ Association (ABBL). The report observed that growth at Luxembourg’s private banks in 2020 outpaced growth at their counterparts in Switzerland.

Private banks held 508 billion euro in assets at the end of 2020, up 9 percent from 466 billion euro a year earlier and more than double the 225 billion euro held at the end of 2008.

New regulations drive up CSSF supervision fees

Luxembourg has decided to raise charges for supervising financial institutions by approximately 10 to 15 percent this year, according to an analysis of the Grand Duchy’s recent government decision. The increase was roughly 15 percent for banks, while investment firms were informed of increases of around 10 percent for 2022.

Green transition leads to higher inflation

In the medium term, the green transition may further fuel inflationary risks, according to ECB board member Isabel Schnabel in an interview with the Financial Times last weekend. Rising energy prices, she said, may require the ECB to do more to hold back increases. She urged portfolios to increase their investments into real assets.