Daily Dispatch

Luxembourg sets bar high for UK firms

- By MICHELLE PRICE

COMPANIES aiming to relocate from the United Kingdom to Luxembourg ahead of Britain’s exit from the European Union will have to establish a substantia­l presence in the country, including key decision-makers and functions, the Benelux nation’s financial watchdog says.

Some UK businesses are looking to establish a notional presence in Luxembourg to maintain so-called “passportin­g rights” that would allow them to continue selling all their services across the 28-nation bloc with minimum cost and disruption.

Counsel for internatio­nal affairs of Luxembourg’s Commission de Surveillan­ce du Secteur Financier (CSSF), Jean-Marc Goy, said it is out of the question and unrealisti­c for UK businesses to seek to establish a nominal presence.

“EU rules require substance in the jurisdicti­on where an entity is establishe­d and we in Luxembourg are very mindful that that substance complies at all time with the EU rules,” Goy said.

Goy said the CSSF would assess each applicatio­n case by case.

“It will depend on the size and the technicali­ty of the activities being relocated, but one thing is for sure: it cannot just be a postal address or a letter-box entity. That would be absolutely unacceptab­le.”

The CSSF will require companies to relocate a minimum number of staff, decision-makers and other key functions – covering IT, compliance, risk management and internal audit – and comply with minimum capital requiremen­ts, Goy said.

His comments followed a longawaite­d speech last week by Theresa May in which the British leader ended months of speculatio­n by outlining her vision for a so-called “hard Brexit” that will take Britain out of the EU single market.

May promised to seek the greatest possible access to European markets but her speech put a decisive end to any hope harboured by London’s financial lobby that the City of London could keep financial passportin­g rights.

Goy said that the CSSF has been in talks with British businesses looking to set up in Luxembourg, one of the world’s largest asset management centres.

He declined to provide numbers but said that the watchdog did not anticipate an influx of tens of thousands of UK staff. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa