Posts tagged "Luxembourg"

Happy National Day

June 22nd, 2022 Posted by Prisma 0 thoughts on “Happy National Day”

Happy National Feierdag to all our clients, partners and friends 🇱🇺

Kindly note that our office remains closed on Thursday 23 June.

Cheers to 15 Years! Here are 15 facts about Prisma – Part 2

September 21st, 2021 Posted by Prisma 0 thoughts on “Cheers to 15 Years! Here are 15 facts about Prisma – Part 2”

Celebrate 15 years of Prisma Luxembourg S.A and get to know more about Prisma with part 2 of our 15 facts series.

Fact #8

If we would visit each client around the globe it would take us 36,956.57 km to do so. Our furthest client away is in Singapore (10,000km).

Fact 8: 36,956,57 km - 15 Facts about Prisma Luxembourg S.A.

Fact #9!

Starting in 2006 with our very first prospectus production, we have now produced more than 2,340 for many different clients. Our aim is to always deliver a top-quality service in a reasonable time.

Fact#10

Giving is not just about making a donation, but rather about making a difference. We’ve donated over 22,500 EUR and have worked closely with 17 different charities over the years. We support great causes and give back where and when we can.

Fact #11!

From all walks of life, from all the languages we speak, sometimes it’s hard to communicate. Prisma has translated over 7,800 documents to help you communicate better. Find out more today at www.prisma.lu or simply call us and talk to us about your needs.

Fact #12!

Our biggest report has over 1,000 pages (1,200 in the meantime…).

The Prisma project managers guide you through the projects, coordinate any required translations, keep track of deadlines and keep you updated at all times.

Do you have a large document that we could you help you with? Check out www.prisma.lu/our-services to see our full service overview.

Fact#13

In our office we speak on average an amazing 4.3 languages per person. How many languages do you speak?

Parla inglese? Oder deutsch? Lëtzebuergesch? Ou peut-être français? Nederlands? We’d love hearing from you.

Fact #14

For 7 years, we are labelled a SuperDrecksKëscht. At Prisma, we want to do our part in preserving the environment. We recycle, use fair trade products and green energy in the office. We reduce our waste to a minimum and only print on paper when it’s really needed. Every little step helps.

Are you still looking for a partner to implement new ESG and SFDR updates? Our team is only an email away.

Fact #15!

To end our 15 Facts about Prisma, we’ve decided on something that is important to us: our relationship with our clients.

Our very first client, over 15 years, is still our client today.

We are grateful for each one of our clients, who we all have a healthy business relationship, as well as a friendship with.

What a ride it has been! We are ready for the next 15 years with you. Thank you for your trust in us.

Find fact 1 to 7 in part 1!

Luxembourg moves to make financial services industry more digital

January 27th, 2021 Posted by Business 0 thoughts on “Luxembourg moves to make financial services industry more digital”

Article published on 24 November 2020 www.igniteseurope.com

Luxembourg has passed a law designed to make its financial services industry more digital, in a move that will enable local lenders and investment firms to electronically store bonds and other assets, Luxembourg Times reports.

Under the new legislation, approved by the parliament of the Grand Duchy yesterday, companies and investors will be able to store digital securities using blockchain technology.

The move comes after local lawmakers approved a legal framework in 2019 that boosted blockchain technology by granting transactions conducted through the technology the same legal status as traditional ones.

Luxembourg Times says the first local real estate fund handed out digital tokens to clients in October last year as it moved to blockchain technology to reduce costs.

Earlier this week FundsDLT, a Luxembourg-based blockchain-based technology platform for the investment fund industry that was initiated by the Luxembourg Stock Exchange, processed a fund purchase transaction that was settled via Deutsche Börse’s post-trade services provider Clearstream.

Zürcher Kantonalbank and Clearstream said this represented their first successfully processed live blockchain-based end-to-end fund transactions, with the two firms highlighting that the processing time for an investor order was reduced from several hours to just a few minutes.

Alfi said at its global fund distribution conference that blockchain would have a “major impact” on the fund industry, affecting the entire value chain from launching to distributing funds, and from managing fund accounts to the settling of trades.

The fund body warned, however, that improvements were necessary to enable blockchain technology to process large amounts of data fast.

Luxembourg increases sustainability requirements for Mifid firms

December 14th, 2020 Posted by Business 0 thoughts on “Luxembourg increases sustainability requirements for Mifid firms”

Article published on 24 November 2020 www.igniteseurope.com

The Luxembourg financial regulator has unveiled new requirements to compel asset managers to pay more attention to environmental, social and governance risks.

The new rules put Luxembourg market participants at the forefront of tackling sustainability risks as EU regulatory amendments on ESG integration have yet to be finalised.

The Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier published a new circular earlier this week compelling asset managers and other financial institutions to integrate sustainability factors into their governance procedures.

The circular applies to firms carrying out investment activities or services under Mifid II, such as managing segregated mandates or providing investment advice.

According to the CSSF, firms should give ESG factors the same prominence as liquidity and solvency risks when considering the “‘viability of [their] business model”.

The new obligations come as EU policymakers put the finishing touches to a number of new rules to compel senior managers to take account of ESG risks.

Amendments to the Ucits directive, Mifid II and the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive are expected to be finalised in the coming weeks, while firms must also contend with the sustainable finance disclosure regulation, which comes into force next March.

Sebastiaan Hooghiemstra, Luxembourg-based associate at NautaDutilh, says many firms have already begun integrating sustainability risks into their investment decision making processes in order to comply with SFDR.

SFDR, which requires firms to make disclosures on ESG factors at both a company and product level, is also leading firms to incorporate sustainability risks into other governance procedures such as remuneration policies, adds Mr Hooghiemstra.

Other EU regulators have also challenged firms to do more to meet their sustainability objectives.

Kleesechersdag

December 8th, 2020 Posted by Prisma 0 thoughts on “Kleesechersdag”

Et ass Kleesechersdag bei Prisma!

On 6 December the famous “Kleeschen” visits the well behaved children in Luxembourg.

He brings toys, nuts, clementines, chocolates and marzipan…. the bigger children also get come crémant 🥳

Lux regulator to ‘fast track’ ESG disclosures

November 27th, 2020 Posted by Business 0 thoughts on “Lux regulator to ‘fast track’ ESG disclosures”

Article published on 24 November 2020 www.igniteseurope.com

The Luxembourg financial regulator is to launch a fast-track procedure for environmental, social and governance disclosures as fund firms battle to meet impending EU rules.

The Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier says it will rely on fund boards to self-certify their compliance with the sustainable finance disclosure regulation ahead of the looming March deadline.

The implementation of SFDR, which requires asset managers with more than 500 employees to disclose the negative environmental and social impacts of their investments, has been beset with problems.

Although the European Commission recently announced that it will delay the imposition of the underlying technical standards for the regulation, the rules will still come into force in March, with asset managers required to produce “high-level and principle-based” disclosures from next year.

Fund houses complain that this vagueness over what exactly they have to disclose coupled with a lack of available data from investee companies make it difficult for firms to adequately comply with the regulation in time.

Marco Zwick, director at the CSSF, says the regulator is “mindful of the difficulties that the market may encounter” with SFDR compliance and will introduce a fast-track procedure for prospectus updates.

Mr Zwick, who was speaking yesterday at a conference organised by the Association of the Luxembourg Fund Industry, says asset managers should “limit their changes to the prospectus in particular” as otherwise the CSSF may not be able to process disclosures in time for the March deadline.

Fund boards will also have to self-certify that their funds are meeting the requirements of SFDR alongside any fast-track applications to the CSSF.

“We are not going to challenge everything from day one but we are going to do a number of checks and we are also going to do some ex-ante verifications,” says Mr Zwick.

Mr Zwick says these checks and verifications will be “on a sample basis” as the CSSF lacks the capacity to process documents for the some 15,000 funds and sub-funds under its supervision.

Lawyers have warned that the two-tier implementation stage for the underlying technical standards could also see asset managers having to submit a new set of more detailed updates to regulators within the next 12 months.

The three European supervisory authorities concluded a consultation on product disclosure templates that firms could use last month.

According to the ESAs, disclosure formats must be standardised but also be able to be deployed for various purposes, including prospectus updates and annual reports.

Prisma RCL Halloween Rugby Camp 2020

October 8th, 2020 Posted by Prisma 0 thoughts on “Prisma RCL Halloween Rugby Camp 2020”

🦇 Registration is now open for the Prisma RCL Halloween Rugby Camp from the 2nd to 6th of November.

It is open to U8s to U14s for experienced Rugby players but as normal also to beginners to Rugby from refugees centers and Caritas foyers.

🏉 Head coach is Luxembourg International and one of the nicest and most respected player/coaches in Luxembourg/Swiss Rugby Yared Katema.

Prisma is proud to support Rugby Club Luxembourg and its mission. Learn more about our Corporate Social Responsibility.

Prisma Halloween Rugby Camp 2020

‘Prepare for no-deal Brexit,’ Lux finance minister tells asset managers

September 22nd, 2020 Posted by Business 0 thoughts on “‘Prepare for no-deal Brexit,’ Lux finance minister tells asset managers”

Article published on 16 September 2020 www.igniteseurope.com

Luxembourg’s finance minister has warned asset managers to brace themselves for a hard Brexit and told UK firms that they will need a physical presence in the EU if they wish to continue doing business in the single market.

Pierre Gramegna, who has been a public supporter of maintaining the EU’s links with the UK financial sector, says Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s plans to rip up parts of the Brexit deal mean an agreement between the two sides is highly unlikely.

Mr Gramegna was speaking at the Association of the Luxembourg Fund Industry’s virtual conference this week after Mr Johnson received initial backing in parliament to change aspects of the EU withdrawal agreement.

Many critics say any changes would break international law and the EU has said the agreement is a “prerequisite for the negotiations on the future partnership” between the bloc and the UK.

Mr Gramegna has previously said he hoped Luxembourg and the UK would still have a “footbridge left” after the UK formally leaves the bloc, but this is “in doubt right now”.

Whatever the UK’s motive, “the likelihood that we will have a wide comprehensive agreement for the future relationship with the [UK] is obviously not anymore likely, so in other words, you should all prepare for a situation where […] the UK becomes a third country like any other”, Mr Gramegna says.

UK firms with no presence in the EU currently will have to set up subsidiaries to continue operating in the single market after December 31, according to the minister.

“They will not be able to work remotely […] they will have to have more presence, which means setting up subsidiaries and so on,” he says.

The UK and EU have sought to secure an equivalence regime during Brexit talks to ensure that financial services firms can continue to access EU markets.

The deadline to reach an agreement was missed in June, raising fears that asset managers in the UK would have to access European markets through a diverse range of national-level rules.

Luxembourg warns UK’s Brexit stance jeopoardises City’s market access

July 7th, 2020 Posted by Business 0 thoughts on “Luxembourg warns UK’s Brexit stance jeopoardises City’s market access”

Article published on 7 July 2020 www.igniteseurope.com

Luxembourg’s finance minister has warned that the UK’s plans to diverge from EU regulations for the financial services industry are threatening the country’s future access to the EU market post-Brexit, the Financial Times reports.

Pierre Gramegna, who has spoken out in favour of preserving the EU’s close links with the UK’s financial services industry, tells the publication that the UK government’s expectations of enhanced equivalence are “in contradiction” with its demand for sovereignty in terms of financial services rules.

Mr Gramegna says in the Financial Times interview that Luxembourg wants to “make sure that we still have a footbridge left” even if the links between the UK and the EU become looser, saying it “would be in the interest of both sides”.

He warns, however, that this “can only be achieved if both sides have the will to do so”.

Mr Gramegna believes the UK’s objectives are hard to reconcile, according to the Financial Times.

“The UK at the same time says ‘as soon as we will be out we will be 100 per cent sovereign again and be able to choose what we do with our own regulation’,” he tells the publication.

“That sounds to me in contradiction with the idea of having an enhanced equivalence. You cannot defend the two things in parallel.”

The EU and the UK last month missed a deadline to conclude equivalence assessments, with both sides blaming each other for failing to complete the assessments.

Michel Barnier, the European Commission’s chief Brexit negotiator, said in a speech last week that the UK had only completed four out of 28 questionnaires relating to areas of financial regulation where equivalence can be granted.

Mr Barnier noted the UK is demanding regulatory divergence from the EU while “trying to keep as many single market benefits as it can” to “make it easy to continue to run EU businesses from London, with minimal operations and staff on the continent”.

The Financial Times says Mr Gramegna’s warning shows that even sympathetic governments have lowered their expectations for their future relationships with the UK because of the UK government’s negotiating position.

The Grand Duchy has been at the forefront of EU governments demanding that the bloc adopt a pragmatic attitude towards market access for financial services.

Luxembourg is Europe’s largest investment fund domicile, with locally-registered funds being sold in over 70 countries globally and managing nearly €4.5 trillion in assets.

Lux eases market access for non-EU funds

July 6th, 2020 Posted by Business 0 thoughts on “Lux eases market access for non-EU funds”

Article published on 6 July 2020 www.igniteseurope.com

Non-EU fund managers will be able to service professional investors in Luxembourg without requiring a licence under new regulations that could be a boon for UK firms after Brexit.

The Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier recently passed two measures to ease access for third-country funds to investors in Luxembourg.

The CSSF says authorised portfolio managers and investment advisers from countries including the US, Switzerland, Japan, Canada, Hong Kong and Singapore can passport their services to Luxembourg without requiring a presence in the Grand Duchy, provided their clients are defined as professional investors under Mifid II.

This could include investment services such as managed accounts, funds of funds, private banks and family offices.

The CSSF says firms from these jurisdictions will only be required to obtain a licence if the firm already has a Luxembourg branch, is servicing retail investors or the Grand Duchy is the principal location where the firm’s principal business activities related to Luxembourg clients is taking place.

Benoit Kelecom, Luxembourg-based counsel at law firm Van Campen Liem, says it is likely that this principal business location “will generally be deemed to be located where the portfolio management or advisory teams are”.

Mr Kelecom says that with portfolio management teams at non-EU firms unlikely to be located in the Grand Duchy, third-country funds will not be deemed to be rendering services in Luxembourg and so will not require a licence.

“This is rather good news for UK asset managers in the context of the continuation of their services post Brexit,” he says.

Augustin de Longeaux, partner at Simmons & Simmons, adds that the new circular puts forward “a very relaxed and flexible regime” for third-country firms.

“Firms are still able to access the Luxembourg market without needing to register. It is only a sub-set of the market but it is a large and important one,” he says.

Mr de Longeaux says that while it is very likely that the UK will be added to the CSSF’s list of equivalent financial regimes after Brexit, an acrimonious end to the UK’s negotiations with the EU would threaten that status.

“If the EU deemed the UK as not equivalent, it would be very difficult for Luxembourg not to follow suit,” he says.

Mr de Longeaux adds that the circular is “a useful clarification” as to which jurisdictions the CSSF recognises as equivalent to its own regime.

“Before applications were decided case by case, now we have clarification that you can still access professional clients on a ‘reach-in’ basis,” he says.

Delegation arrangements for Ucits and alternative investment funds distributed to investors in Luxembourg will continue to be subject to the measures in Ucits and the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive.

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