Make America Great Again 2.0

In a thought-provoking piece from May 2018, I penned a commentary here titled ‹Make America Great Again›, promptly re-titled by the editor to ‹Rabobank: Trump is good for economy and stock market›. Reflecting on it now, I am mostly financially appreciative. To clarify, today’s discourse is not about Amazonian deforestation but Donald Trump once more.

Ethenea retire les actions, les métaux et les matières premières de son fonds mixte

Ethenea a reçu l’autorisation du régulateur luxembourgeois de retirer les actions, les métaux précieux et les matières premières du portefeuille multi-actifs Ethna-DEFENSIV, transformant ainsi le fonds en stratégie purement obligataire.

‘Facebook Effect’ in Luxembourg reshapes private equity in EU

Amid the sustained growth of Luxembourg’s private markets, propelled by ongoing onshoring and the growing acknowledgment of its robust legal frameworks, Investment Officer sat down for a conversation with Claus Mansfeldt, president of the Luxembourg Private Equity & Venture Capital Association (LPEA). The discussion sheds light on Luxembourg’s evolving role in Europe’s private equity landscape.

CVC Capital now eyes 2024 for new attempt to go public

Luxembourg-headquartered CVC Capital Partners, one of Europe’s biggest private equity firms, on Wednesday decided to postpone its initial public offering on the Amsterdam stock exchange, a person familiar with the decision has confirmed. The firm now is looking for a new opportunity to go public in 2024.

‘Private credit will eclipse equity in the next decade’

Despite rapid development, private credit is still in its very early growth stages. Despite macroeconomic and cyclical challenges, Jiři Król, the deputy CEO of the Alternative Investment Management Association, sees private credit catching up to the much larger private equity in the next 10 years. He also sees huge potential development from the reformed European long-term investment fund vehicle (Eltif).

Where is the next Silicon Valley Bank?

Interest rates are shooting up and in some cases have reached the highest levels in decades. The share prices of US regional banks are collapsing again. And yet reports of new collapsing banks remain absent. Why?

Deposits!

The chart below provides the answer to that question. Despite continued competition with money market funds, deposits of smaller US banks are steadily increasing. Compared to a year ago, there has been a modest growth of 2 per cent.