We wanted to understand what makes this domicile so attractive for private debt, so we spoke to one of our Luxembourg experts, David Kubilus, chief commercial officer of U.S. Bank Global Fund Services – Europe. He explains why the market is flourishing and what you should keep in mind if you’re interested in entering it.
Q: Private debt is one of the fastest growing asset classes in Luxembourg right now. What’s driving this growth?
The low interest environment that prevailed for the past ten years forced investors to seek higher yielding investments. Private debt offered positive returns while a lot of bonds and money markets show zero or negative yields.
Now, as interest rates are ticking upward, there’s still a lot of appeal for private debt, as they haven’t lost value the way other bonds have due to their comparatively low durations. This AIMA article explains it well:
“Credit risk plays a larger role in determining the value of private debt than it does in many traditional bonds. Plus, private debt is extended for shorter terms. This means that many private debt instruments have comparatively low durations – a measure of how sensitive their prices are to changes in interest rates. By looking at bonds and private debt in terms of duration, we can see exactly why private debt might suffer less in a rising interest rate environment.”
In Luxembourg, the government and regulators have given asset managers a very flexible framework of vehicles and fund types that can address the requirements of different types of investors and the different geographies for private debt investments. There is also a mature ecosystem in Luxembourg to support these funds and their distribution from a legal, audit and management company perspective.
Q: What challenges does private debt present for asset managers?
Private debt is still a fairly new asset class for investment funds, and very few administrators in Luxembourg know how to handle its nuances. Maintaining the critical data elements required for accounting and servicing private debt instruments is a complex process.
Private debt is a sub-class of private capital but could include CLOs, CDOs, infrastructure debt and private loans. Each one of these structures has its own unique requirements. Many managers also want integrated loan servicing solutions – and they quickly realize there’s only a very small number of firms in Luxembourg capable of providing that.