1 / 22

The ABBL: Who we are, what we do

The ABBL: Who we are, what we do. 19 September 2011 Tom Théobald Editor & Press relations Secretary of the Board of Directors The Luxembourg Bankers’ Association. ABBL: Missions. Employers‘ representation Public relations & Policy Think tank & Knowledge platform.

zena
Download Presentation

The ABBL: Who we are, what we do

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The ABBL: Who we are, what we do 19 September 2011 Tom Théobald Editor & Press relations Secretary of the Board of Directors The Luxembourg Bankers’ Association

  2. ABBL: Missions • Employers‘ representation • Public relations & Policy • Think tank & Knowledge platform

  3. The ABBL and itsmembers • Universal banks (99) • Covered bonds issuing banks (3) • Public banks (2) • Other professionals of the financial sector(5) • Financial professions (4) • Ancillary activities to the financial sector (20) • Total: 132

  4. ABBL: Background 1939: Establishment of the ABBL (10 banks) 1947: First professional training courses 1960: Founding member of the European Banking Federation (EBF) 1968: First collective employment agreement 1980s: Increased lobbying activities 1990: Launch of the training institute IFBL 1992: Launch of the Banking Academy 1993: Active role in drafting the “banking law” (5 April 1993) 1994: Launch of the ASTF 2000: Launch of PROFIL 2001: ABBL opens membership to entities other than banks 2004: Promotion strategy: Luxembourg for Finance 2007: Launch of ABBL business line clusters 2005-today: increased activity in response to wave of European regulations

  5. The ABBL Network

  6. ABBL: Structure

  7. Organigramm

  8. ABBL Clusters

  9. Technical Committees

  10. Financial centre: A little bit of history • 1842: Luxembourg joins the German “Zollverein” • 1856: Establishment of the BCEE and BIL • 1862: Law allowing foreigners to deposit at the BCEE • 1893: First foreign bank in Luxembourg (Société Générale Alsacienne) • 1921: Economic union with Belgium • 1927: Creation of the Luxembourg Stock Exchange

  11. Financial centre: A little bit of history • 1934: Creation of a special authorisation for the profession of banker • 1939: Creation of the Luxembourg Bankers’ Association (ABBL) • 1940-44: Nazi occupation – foreign bank branches are closed, BCEE is liquidated, BIL & BGL taken over by German banks • 1945: Creation of Luxembourg’s first banking supervisory authority

  12. Financial centre: A little bit of history • 1960: Establishment of the European Banking Federation • 1963: World’s first Eurobond issued in Luxembourg – arrival of the first American banks • 1967: first European banking directive • 1971-1981: number of banks grows from 37 to 111 • 1983: Creation of the Luxembourg Monetary Institute (IML) • 1988: Luxembourg first in transposing UCITS directive

  13. Financial centre: A little bit of history • 1993: Banking law of 5 April 1993 • 1997: Law establishing covered bonds issuing banks • 2000-2010: Introduction of the euro, increased European harmonisation, Luxembourg laws diversifying activities of financial centre (PSFs, securitisation, pension funds, etc.)

  14. Banks today: At a glance • 143 banks from 24 countries • … of which 42 German banks • Balance sheet total: 778 billion € (Jul. 2011) • Employment: 26‘147 (Jun. 2011) • Over 13’000 cross-border employees in the banking sector • Contribution to GDP: 14% (2008) • Contribution to nat. employment: 12% (2008) • Contribution to tax revenues: 13% (2008)

  15. Banks: Categories • 3 general categories: • Universal banks • Covered bonds issuing banks • E-money institutions • Foreign banks: establish subsidiaries or/and branches in Luxembourg • Large majority of banks are universal banks: all-purpose banks authorised to exercise any type of banking activity (as defined by the banking law of 1993)

  16. Banks: Business models • Private banking / Wealth management • Depositary banking / Fund administration • Retail banking • Corporate banking • … While some banks specialise, other banks are active in all or a number of the above businesses

  17. Banks: Some statistics

  18. Banks: Some statistics

  19. Banks: Some statistics

  20. Banks: Some statistics

  21. Banks: Some statistics

  22. Thank you for your attention. Learn more at www.abbl.lu

More Related