Roxane Haas, Banking Leader at PwC Luxembourg; Credit: PwC Luxembourg

To take stock of the unprecedented changes that have happened since March 2020, PwC Luxembourg has just launched "Banking in Luxembourg 2021 - An ever changing banking landscape?”.
 
The aim of this report is to look at the challenges and opportunities of the COVID-19 pandemic in detail and accompany bankers on a walk through the new landscape offering guidance and analysis. 
 
With its unparalleled range of services, financial infrastructure and expertise, Luxembourg remains a financial global hub. However, the banking sector has been going through a period of transformation for a number of years with technological disruption, growing awareness of climate change and the way to address it and new ways of working. Everything was accelerated with the COVID-19 crisis and this has forced the banking sector to rethink, refocus and realign priorities even more.
 
According to the report, around 70% to 80% of all workers at financial institutions in Luxembourg were able to continue to work from home using their laptops and tablets and the banks were fully functional, as was the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF). This remote working situation led financial institutions to reflect on how they operate on a daily basis and to innovate in the way they offer products, especially with the rise of digitalisation. On the other hand, workers have now experienced new ways of working and a certain flexibility meaning that remote, even if only partial, is here to stay. 
 
Working from home in turn has greatly exposed financial institutions to new cyber threats. The period 2020-21 saw a wide range of emerging risks on a global scale, including the financial sectors’ abilities to implement Anti-Money Laundering and Counter Terrorist Financing (AML / CTF) obligations from supervision, regulation and policy reform to suspicious transaction reporting and international cooperation. Both pre- and post-COVID-19, AML / CTF related matters continue to be amongst the top priorities for Luxembourg regulators as well as for European and international authorities.
 
On the other hand, another major change is the rise of environmental, social and governance (ESG) and the growing demand from customers to invest in green products. Banks not only need to adapt their product portfolio to this new, growing demand, but it has become mandatory for them to also keep up with the increasing regulatory pressure if they want to be sustainable in the long run. 
 
Roxane Haas, Banking Leader at PwC Luxembourg, commented: “For a few years now, the global financial industry has been facing drastic changes with an increasingly complex regulatory context and the need to reinvent the Banking sector. Luxembourg has definitely not been spared by this revolution, all of this being accelerated by the COVID-19 crisis and its aftermath. The past eighteen months have yet again proven the resilience of Luxembourg as a global financial centre. But now the time has come to embrace the many new challenges in order to transform them into business opportunities. This report looks at these opportunities in detail and aims to provide some much-needed guidance and analysis for the long way ahead. At PwC, as always, we look forward to walking you through these exciting and challenging opportunities”.