Prince Jacques, who will be two years old in December, was the undoubted star of the show at the traditional Monegasque picnic on Saturday. Held, according to custom, at the Parc Princesse-Antoinette, this annual event every September is an opportunity for all of Monaco’s citizens to meet and mingle with the Princely family.
On Friday, the Princess was in Geneva to mark World First Aid Day with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC). A 2016 Red Cross Federation goodwill ambassador for first aid, the former Olympic swimmer said, “Today, we would like to remind the world that children are capable of saving lives — of themselves and others around them if they are equipped with first aid training.”
“I lost my cousin to drowning when he was five years old and I have some friends that have lost their children to drowning too,” she also commented.
The Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation was founded in 2012 to save lives by putting an end to drowning.
Article first published September 11, 2016.
Day: 11 September 2016
Americans in Monaco remember 9/11
Some members of Monaco’s American community, along with friends of Swiss, French, British, Russian and Monegasques nationalities, gathered at the Yacht Club Sunday evening for an informal drink to honour the passage of 15 years since 9/11. A glass was raised to “those who have fallen, those who have risen and those to come”.
The US community of Monaco, which numbers around 300, is well represented by MonacoUSA the American Club of the Riviera, and the 14th Annual International Conference for the Associations of American Clubs (AAC) takes place October 20-23 at the Novotel Monte-Carlo. While the conference was previously reserved for the Presidents of the 50 American Clubs worldwide, the event is now open to any American Club member.
While this was not organised through the American Club or MonacoUSA, the 14th Annual International Conference for the Associations of American Clubs (AAC) takes place October 20-23 at the Novotel Monte-Carlo.
While the conference was previously attended only by the Presidents of the 50 American Clubs worldwide, the event is now open to any American Club member.
Burton Gintell
, President of The American Club of the Riviera and
Member of the Association of American Clubs Steering Committee, says, “We will be actively coordinating between the AAC visitors and ACR hosts to ensure that a great time is had by all, and that the attendees from other countries also spend some enjoyable times with our members.” He also asks that “you register for the 5 planned events to ensure your places and to assist in our planning”.
The first event on the conference agenda is a welcome reception for visiting delegates hosted by MonacoUSA at Stars’n’Bars. The cocktail on the Stardeck starts at 8 pm and €30 per person includes beverages and finger food. Tickets can only be purchased through the American Club of the Riviera. Neither MonacoUSA nor Stars’n’Bars will have tickets available.
KBL Monaco gives global investment perspectives at yacht club
The CEO of KBL Monaco Private Bankers (KBL mpb), Jean Danckaert, last week hosted an investment conference at the Monaco Yacht Club, and attended by more than 100 guests, including clients, partners and industry peers.
KBL mpb, a full-service bank with clients from almost 70 different countries, had two of its key figures on board, Marie-Hélène Royet, Chief Investment Officer, and Philippe Giordan, Head of Advisory, to present the end-of-the-year investment outlook.
Investors sat on the sidelines for much of the summer as they waited for Federal Reserve Chair, Janet Yellen, to speak at Jackson Hole, Royet said, but despite popular fears of impending doom, triggered by events such as the Brexit vote, the global economic outlook remains modestly positive.
“In the current context,” she said, “at a time when yields continue to slide lower, short duration bonds are among one of the most attractive in the fixed-income universe.”
While it’s difficult to find value in fixed-income – with many government bonds now trading at negative yields – Royet indicated a preference for bonds offering better potential returns but also more risk, including corporates, US high-yield, emerging-market debt and inflation-linked bonds.
Regarding equity markets, Giordan cited the overall positive macro outlook, but estimates for 2017 seem too bullish and uncertainty remains. In the US, consumer spending is the predominant driver, reflecting the lowest level of US unemployment since 2008, leading to higher wage levels and confidence. He also highlighted the risks of a potential Trump victory in the US election.
In Europe, early indicators such as confidence data only show minor signs of worsening sentiment or growth outlook. Nevertheless, he still believes that the uncertainty due to Brexit and upcoming elections will drive volatility up from current low levels.
Royet and Giordan concluded by presenting two interesting examples of investment themes. The first was European family-held small and midsize companies, averaging higher returns than their peers with lower risk – making this niche a potentially attractive long-term investment opportunity. The second, strategies based on volatility indices, can also lead to longer-term stable returns by trading volatility futures or cashing in through option sales.
Established in 1996, KBL Monaco Private Bankers, with its core business in personalised financial services, ranging from a cash desk and order execution on international markets to high-value property mortgages and tailored asset management, is a member of KBL European Private Bankers, a pan-European private banking group.
Monaco Foundation awards PIAC in Brazil
Rosa Barba, winner of the International Contemporary Art Prize winner of the Prince Pierre of Monaco Foundation, has found great success at Brazil’s São Paulo Biennial festival, the second oldest art biennial after Venice.
The new film by Rosa Barba, “Disseminate and Hold” was screened for the first time at this year’s 32nd Biennial and is being presented as part of the “Live Uncertainty” exhibition (September 7 running through December 11).
Rosa Barba was named winner of the 2016 PIAC – Prix International d’Art Contemporain (International Contemporary Art Prize) – for her work “Subconscious Society”, Feature, 2014. The artist received a prize of € 20,000 and a € 20,000 sum dedicated to the production of a new work.
Her new project, “Disseminate and Hold”, produced under the guidance of the PIAC Artistic Director, Lorenzo Fusi, studies geographies and artificial landscapes and their relationship often linked to political agendas and utopian visions of society.
The Prince Pierre of Monaco Foundation awards the PIAC by a jury under the artistic Presidency of HSH The Princess of Hanover.
Nice holds first open water swim
Open water swimming, or “wild swimming” as the Brits like to call it, which involves swapping the noisy, overheated, chlorine smelling local swimming baths for the pleasures of the naturally wet outdoors, has officially become de rigueur in Nice. Unlike the SwimRun movement that started in Sweden in 2005 whereby teams of two run and swim across islands in the Stockholm archipelago, in icy water temps of 8°-12°C, or the after-work clubs in London braving the river Thames throughout winter, open water swimming in the Mediterranean has more instant appeal. However, the day before Nice’s first open water swimming competition, the Prom’Swim, on Sunday was not looking promising.
First, the start of the course at Carras beach, at the west end of the Promenade, had been closed to the public on Saturday afternoon. Police patrolled the stretch of beach preventing bathers seeking relief from the Indian summer, as there were sanitation issues. (The “No Swimming” signs were still in place Sunday morning).
Then there was a sudden infestation of jellyfish. After a magnificent summer for swimming along the Coast, with very few méduses sited, a welcome change for beachgoers, Saturday was a different story as lifeguards took to their kayaks warning people to get out of the water.
But, undeterred, some 400 swimmers met at Carras Sunday morning for an 8 am start, facing a slightly wavy but warm 24°C sea and a 5km course. Other distances of 1km, 2km and a 500m kids race took off from the PromSwim village along the promenade des anglais.
There was a minute of silence to honour the victims of the Nice July 14 attack.
As Valerie Vic, a fortysomething French Nice resident who swims with a club at the Olympic-sized pool Jean Bouin, told Monaco Life, “I have lived in Nice a long time but never swam in the sea. This was a real challenge because it’s so different than swimming in a pool where you see the bottom.”
Prom’Swim was founded by Nice born Loic Branda, a former French swim champion?? He crossed English Channel with a partner in 2004 and has won 8 national titles. In 2009, he turned his attention to helping preserve natural environments and worked as an engineer specialising in water treatments before launching Swim The Riviera, which offers open water swim vacations.