Skip to content
International Adviser
  • Contact
  • Login
  • Subscribe
  • Regions
    • United Kingdom
    • Middle East
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • North America
    • Latin America
  • Industry
    • Tax & Regulation
    • Products
    • Life
    • Health & Protection
    • People Moves
    • Companies
    • Offshore Bonds
    • Retirement
    • Technology
    • Platforms
  • Investment
    • Equities
    • Fixed Income
    • Alternatives
    • Multi Asset
    • Property
    • Macro Views
    • Structured Products
    • Emerging Markets
    • Commodities
  • IA 100
  • Best Practice
    • Best Practice News
    • Best Practice Awards
  • Media
    • Video
    • Podcast
  • Directory
  • My IA
    • Events
    • IA Tax Panel
    • IA Intermediary Panel
    • About IA

ANNOUNCEMENT: Read more financial articles on our partner site, click here to read more.

SIGN IN INTERNATIONAL ADVISER

Access full content on the International Adviser site, access your saved articles, control email preferences and amend your account details

[login-with-ajax]
Not Registered?

Benchmark huggers? Not in Luxembourg, claims regulator

1 Aug 17

There are no benchmark huggers in Europe’s biggest fund centre, Luxembourg’s financial regulator CSSF has claimed, “except one isolated case.”

There are no benchmark huggers in Europe’s biggest fund centre, Luxembourg’s financial regulator CSSF has claimed, “except one isolated case.”

Eighteen months after the European Securities and Markets Authority (Esma) published a report saying that up to 15% of active European-domiciled funds could actually be index huggers, Luxembourg’s regulator only identified one such fund among the more than 4,100 Ucits vehicles domiciled in the Grand Duchy. That’s about 0.00024% of the total.

“The CSSF (Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier) could not identify any Ucits qualifying as closet index tracker (…) except for one isolated case,” the regulator said, stopping short of naming this single sinner fund.

Luxembourg’s regulator also admitted it identified “some funds” that apparently didn’t use a benchmark.

Though Luxembourg’s regulator could simply have applied a commonly used benchmark to these funds which would probably have resulted in the identification of many more closet tracking funds, it instead “asked the concerned management companies to increase the level of information disclosed in the key investor information document (KIID) and the sales prospectus.”

“The CSSF (Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier) could not identify any UCITS qualifying as closet index tracker (…) except for one isolated case”

Consumer finance organisation BETTER FINANCE condemned the CSSF report as ‘disappointing’ and ‘weak’, as the regulator did not disclose its definition of closet indexing, “which must differ from the one used by Better Finance and Esma.”

Tags: Luxembourg | UCITS

Share this article
Follow by Email
Facebook
fb-share-icon
X (Twitter)
Post on X
LinkedIn
Share

Related Stories

  • Europe

    Hoxton Wealth: Two overlooked measures in UK Budget that could impact expats

    Asia

    Why AES International is attracting the next generation of financial advisers  

  • Will 2018 see the decline of British expats in the EU?

    Europe

    UK Budget: Government to remove access to class 2 VNICs for expats

    Europe

    Allianz Partners unveils international health insurance plans for expats


NEWSLETTER

Sign Up for International
Adviser Daily Newsletter

subscribe

  • View site map
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact

Published by Money Map Media – part of G&M Media Ltd Copyright (c) 2024.

International Adviser covers the global intermediary market that uses cross-border insurance, investments, banking and pension products on behalf of their high-net-worth clients. No news, articles or content may be reproduced in part or in full without express permission of International Adviser.