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07/08/2009

Madoff: What's going on in Ireland?

The Irish Independent has reported that  a record number of litigants will seek to have cases heard this week in the Commercial Court, which was set up five years ago to fast track multi-million euro business disputes.

This special court, which became operational in January 2004, heralded a new approach to commercial litigation in Ireland. It was set up to send a message to the world that Ireland is a good place to do business and resolve costly disputes

Among the applications will be attempts to sue Dublin-based Thema International Fund plc, which invested with disgraced US "Ponzi Prince" Bernard Madoff.

 

07:33 Posted in Ireland | Permalink | Comments (0)

The UK and France have released a declaration on global governance and development

The United Kingdom and France intend to cooperate closely to confront the political, economic and security issues of the 21st century. Pursuit of the reform of the governance of international institutions is a necessity if they are to be made more capable of meeting the challenges raised by international security and responding to the global economic crisis and under-development.

As far as financial centers are concerned there are a couple of paragraphs (keywords in bold):

France and the United Kingdom will also address the task of implementing the decision of the G20 concerning uncooperative jurisdictions and remain vigilant in ensuring that the 42 countries on the OECD “grey list” meet their commitment to apply international standards for the exchange of tax-related information. It is essential that we maintain the momentum set by the London Summit. We are therefore clear that where jurisdictions have not reached the standard of information exchange agreement by March 2010, they should be subject to coordinated international counter-measures agreed in London. Both our countries also stress the importance of combating tax evasion and undertake to combine our efforts to reinforce the coherence and effectiveness of international action in this domain. We agree that the threshold of 12 tax information exchange agreements should be seen as a starting point in the move towards greater tax transparency. If progress stalls we will expect the threshold to rise above 12, bringing those who have not made further progress back into the “grey list”. We will work together through the G20 to ensure that proposals are developed by the time of the next G20 Summit to ensure that developing countries can benefit from the new cooperative tax environment, including through a new multilateral tax information exchange agreement. We also call on the OECD to look at country by country reporting and the benefits of this for tax transparency and reducing tax avoidance.

The United Kingdom and France welcome the work underway to consider how the Global Forum on transparency and exchange of tax information can fully involve developing countries as equal participants and reform its governance, including to establish an effective peer review process to ensure effective implementation of the international standards, ahead of the Pittsburgh Summit. Successful development of this type of arrangement in the area of tax havens could provide a model for other areas where the OECD has a particular contribution to make to responding to global challenges.

France and the United Kingdom acknowledge the work undergone by the Financial Action task force (FATF) to revise and reinvigorate the process aiming at identifying uncooperative jurisdictions and call the FATF to proceed swiftly with its new review process in order to publicly name the jurisdictions that pose risks to the integrity of our financial system and apply counter measures where necessary.

The fight against non-cooperative jurisdictions should also encompass prudential regulations. We call on the FSB to swiftly assess jurisdictions against international supervisory and prudential standards and report back by September on their progress in identifying uncooperative jurisdictions.

07:18 Posted in General | Permalink | Comments (0)

07/06/2009

Letter to Peter De Proft, Director General of EFAMA

Peter De Proft, Director General of EFAMA, comments on the EU Commission’s launch of a public consultation on the UCITS Depositary Function:

EFAMA very much welcomes the Commission’s consultation because we think it is absolutely necessary that investors have faith in the UCITS regulatory framework, and as the leading representative of the asset management industry in Europe, we are very happy to be consulted and to express our views in order to keep investors’ confidence in the UCITS’ brand.

We think that it is important that we have the opportunity to express EFAMA’s views of how European policy towards UCITS depositaries should best evolve.”

I sent the following e-mail :

 

Dear Mr de Proft

Further to the EFAMA press release dated 3 July where you state that “EFAMA very much welcomes the Commission’s consultation because we think it is absolutely necessary that investors have faith in the UCITS regulatory framework, and as the leading representative of the asset management industry in Europe, we are very happy to be consulted and to express our views in order to keep investors’ confidence in the UCITS’ brand. We think that it is important that we have the opportunity to express EFAMA’s views of how European policy towards UCITS depositaries should best evolve.”, I would like, as a rigorous stakeholder, to stare my views with you.


I agree without any reserve to state that it is absolutely necessary that investors have faith in the UCITS regulatory framework and that it is critical to keep investors’ confidence in the UCITS’ brand.

But I am quite surprised by the way the ALFI and the EFAMA are handling the Madoff issue.

When discrepancies are clear enough, it is better to make amend and take initiative to build or rebuild trust than denying and/or hushing up the issue: a jurisdiction should not communicate on its fully compliant legal and regulatory framework and on the faithful transposition, when a basic analysis to compare the directive and the law and related regulations demonstrates that critical provisions explicitly stated in the UCITS directive were clearly dropped in transposition all the more than these missing provisions definitely opened the drift.

As I wrote, The base of funds is confidence, and the base of confidence is the truth.

Please find attached the current draft of my analysis of the Commission’s working paper on the UCITS depositary function, where I demonstrate to what extend an inaccurate transposition of the directive in Luxembourg opened the drift.

 

The expression "fully compliant" or "faithfull" to qualify the Luxembourg legal and regulatory framework vis-à-vis the UCITS directive are definitely not acceptable.

 


I am looking forward to hearing from you soon.

 


Best regards

 


Jérôme Turquey
Consultant in Business Ethics and Reputational Risk
http://ethiquedesplaces.blogspirit.com

 

 

 

 

Analysis attached

18:51 Posted in General | Permalink | Comments (0)