ABBL sees EU retail investment package as ‘controversial’
Luxembourg banking association ABBL on Monday said it sees the EU’s new retail investment plans as “controversial”, warning that the package that aims to prioritise consumer interests and strengthen investor protection “may have unintended consequences” and could distort the investment sector.
"Au Benelux, le client ne se contentera pas d'un fonds existant".
Les exigences imposées aux distributeurs de fonds par les sélectionneurs de fonds, les banques privées et les gestionnaires de portefeuilles discrétionnaires deviennent de plus en plus difficiles et rigoureuses. Au Benelux en particulier, les clients ne sont pas satisfaits des fonds existants ; ils veulent des solutions personnalisées et spécifiques.
EU ban on kickbacks off the table, at least for now
When the long wait for the retail investment strategy finally ended this afternoon at a European Commission press conference in Brussels, there were no big surprises. There finally will be no full ban on inducements. But Commissioner Mairead McGuinness gave the financial industry three years to hit her targets for transparency, costs and retail investor participation, or the ban will be back on the table.
Eltifs: Esma opens consultation on technical standards
Europe’s top financial supervisor on Tuesday said it has opened up a consultation on the draft technical standards for European Long Term Investment Funds, or Eltifs, to collect input from the industry. Interested stakeholders have until 24 August to provide input.
The standards, known formally as the ‘RTS’, shed more light on the redemption policies and matching mechanism for Eltifs. The consultation also asks the industry to comment on the proposed disclosure requirements for costs of Eltifs.
US anti-ESG policy seen as reason to underweight the region
While those European investors still in doubt about the importance of ESG are becoming increasingly bogged down in a rearguard action, U.S. states are increasingly passing anti-ESG laws. “If this becomes federal policy, I would underweight the U.S. in the portfolio,” said Gaya Herrington, a sustainability researcher and advisor to the Club of Rome.
SFDR level 2 finetuning: more details and lots of extra work
Technical standards with which sustainability information must comply are becoming clearer as far as the European supervisory authorities are concerned. They published a comprehensive consultation paper with a high level of detail and many calculation formulae on the level 2 implementation of the EU’s Sustainable Finance Disclosure Directive, or SFDR. The industry can propose amendments up to 4 July.
‘Value for money’ replaces full inducement ban in EU retail plan
Fund firms face the prospect of EU rules setting standards of “value for money” for their investment products under the Retail Investment Strategy due to be unveiled on 24 May. This could include disincentives, for example, to charging active management fees for an investment that underperforms an index fund. For all the discussion of a ban on inducements for investment advice, the commission has decided to propose a more limited inducement ban on execution-only investments.
Esma wants EU law to stop ‘undue costs’ in investment funds
Europe’s top regulator for securities and financial markets on Wednesday said it believes there is a need for EU-level legislation to make sure investors do not bear costs that are considered excessive, unnecessary, or unreasonable when they put their money in investment funds.
La boîte à outils des fonds d'investissement alternatifs au Luxembourg
En 2013, le Luxembourg a lancé la transposition de la Directive européenne sur les gestionnaires de fonds d’investissement alternatifs (AIFMD) dans sa législation nationale. Ce processus aboutira, avec la conversion d’autres pays européens à la Directive AIFM, au premier environnement réglementé à l’échelle mondiale pour les fonds d’investissement alternatifs (FIA).
Biodiversity credit markets needed to finance $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.