Sustainable investing: Four drivers making green ventures attractive

Amid Monaco Ocean Week, Damian Payiatakis, Head of Sustainable and Impact Investing at Barclays Private Bank, talks to Monaco Life about green ventures as an attractive asset class.

“Attractive valuations, governmental suppor, illiquidity benefits are some of the reasons one should look into this asset class,” explains Damian Payiatakis, Head of Sustainable and Impact Investing at Barclays Private Bank.

Looking at the market, green ventures raised less capital in 2023 than seen in either of the two preceding years. “The total value of private investment was down on levels seen in 2022, ranging from 12% lower, at $51 billion, to a 30% deceleration (at $32 billion), depending on the source. In both cases, it was the first slowing in investment seen since 2020. That said, investment in the overall start-up market plunged by 38% in 2023.”

Payiatakis reveals that, facing a challenging macroeconomic environment with both higher interest rates and more uncertainty, many investors have decided to “wait-and-see”, while many entrepreneurs seem to be conserving their existing capital and not coming to market, for now.

“Turning to 2024, many of the same headwinds face investors, albeit they’re potentially abating. Four factors, however, might point to this year being an opportune moment to allocate to climate tech,” reveals Payiatakis.

Ventures at attractive valuations 

First, explains Payiatakis, valuations are likely to be at more attractive levels than seen for some time, if at all. Last year’s slide in overall investment was driven more by reduced deal size (down 28% on average) than deal count (down 3%).

Furthermore, entrepreneurs coming to market or earlier-stage investors needing to exit positions will find it more of a struggle to raise capital, compared with the buoyant markets of prior years. For the “2024 Climate Tech Oracle” roundtable, six of seven industry players expected “more flat or down rounds in climate tech compared with 2023”. For newer investors, this, in turn, creates more favourable investment conditions.

Governmental support accelerates 

Governments will continue to accelerate their focus and support for cleantech, says Payiatakis, as much for potential economic growth opportunities, energy security and international standing, as for environmental principles.

He continues that, for example, in response to the US Inflation Reduction Act (IRA)’s $369 billion of funding, the EU in February agreed to the Net Zero Industrial Act (NZIA) to strengthen Europe’s net-zero technology products manufacturing industry and build on the Green Deal Industrial Plan launched in 2023.

Moreover, the “UAE Consensus” that emerged from COP28 has established a range of global commitments, such as tripling renewable energy capacity by 2030 or doubling the global average annual rate of energy efficiency.

“While the path may not always be smooth, governmental policy and regulatory incentives continue to improve the environment for green tech companies to start and scale,” says Payiatakis.

Illiquidity portfolio benefits

Allocating to early-stage green tech can also capture the illiquidity benefits of private assets, explains Payiatakis. “Given that the outlook for 2024 is one of subdued growth, investors might seek to enhance returns by adding assets that extend the time horizon of their portfolios.”

Moreover, says Payiatakis, from a behavioural finance perspective, the illiquidity associated with private markets can help investors to stay the course in the face of short-term uncertainty and volatility, supporting one’s long-term goals.

“New environmentally focused funds and vintages closing in 2024 will have a blank scorecard in terms of performance, and, as noted above, a more attractive roster of potential ventures from which to select,” he says. “Meanwhile, the cleantech companies that have weathered the recent tougher times will likely be leaner and positioned for growth over the next decade.”

Building a family legacy 

Finally, while not purely a financial rationale, Payiatakis says that investors may consider investing for “emotional returns” as well as benefits for family legacy and intergenerational continuity.

“Investing in green companies likely to prosper from long-term growth trends, and helping to address urgent global challenges, can be personally satisfying,” he explains. “As found in the last survey for the Investing for Global Impact report, over three-quarters of wealthy individuals, families and family offices engage with impact investing given a sense of responsibility to make the world a better place.”

It can also enable family unity and continuity given that 53% of wealthy families surveyed by Barclays say that sustainable investing is helping to bridge the gap between generations, and 80% say involving younger generations will help prepare them to take on family responsibility.

In conclusion, Damian Payiatakis says, “While allocating to early-stage green technologies has noteworthy potential, investors also should be aware of risks by the nature of asset class and thematic focus: investing in early-stage companies has inherent challenges around informational barriers, risk of failure and liquidity.”

Furthermore, for environmental challenges, he explains, the “best” solution is subject to research, competition and debate that rages across the science, technology as well as business. “Picking the winning companies is not easy.”

Meanwhile, the breadth of opportunities across cleantech, climate tech, green tech, nature tech and the like, is significant, says Payiatakis. “This provides a range of opportunities, and challenge of understanding, often in deeply technical fields.”

“Practically, for investors, these risks can be mitigated through seeking deep expertise, focusing on fund selection and diversification of investments both across themes and vintages,” he concludes.

SEE ALSO:

Monaco to host Blue Economy and Finance Forum as part of 2025 UN Ocean Conference

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Photo credit: Sindre Fs, Pexels

 

 

5th Superyacht Chef Competition set for April

As the sails unfurl and the azure waters beckon, a different kind of battle is brewing aboard the superyachts of Monaco. The International Superyacht Chef Competition, organised by the prestigious Yacht Club de Monaco (YCM) in collaboration with Bluewater, is on the horizon.

“Every year, this event brings together talented chefs from all over the world, ready to take up the challenge of creating unforgettable culinary experiences,” says YCM General Secretary Bernard d’Alessandri. “As a showcase of gastronomic excellence on superyachts, the Superyacht Chef Competition continues to make its mark on the yachting world while promoting the values of our collective ‘Monaco Capital of Advanced Yachting’ approach.”

Last year’s culinary battle winners were YCM Executive Chef Renato Secchi and Chef Marco Tognon, with their traditional “four-hand” dinner. The gourmet evening benefited the Antoine Alléno Association, honoring star Chef Yannick Alleno’s late son.

Top chefs will select the winners

This year, Breton three-Michelin star Chef Glenn Viel will preside over the international jury, with Joël Garault, President of Goûts et Saveurs, and other renowned and experienced top chefs in charge of selecting the winners.

Marco Tognon (M/Y Planet – 72m), the winner of the 4th edition, will be present to give his opinion on the quality of the dishes alongside Chef Danny Davies. Host of “Behind the Line with Chef Danny Davies” and author of two vegan books, Danny Davies has over 25 years of experience on private yachts. Finalist of Objectif Top Chef, and the head of Coya and Taera restaurants in Monaco Chef Victoria Vallenilla completes the Jury line-up.

See also: Venezuela’s calling: New Taera restaurant opens at the Hôtel De Paris

As is customary in this prestigious competition, chefs will follow an anti-waste criterium under the supervision of Chef Duncan Biggs. To avoid being penalised, every chef must use every ingredient in the mystery basket, putting their culinary skills to the test as they are tasked with transforming random ingredients into a gourmet dish.

Meet the contestants

This year’s participants are Paulo Ucha Longhi (M/Y Hercules – 50m), Joelyanne Le Faucher (M/Y Artemis – 33m), Mateusz Mitka (M/Y Lady Britt – 63m), Margot Laurent (M/Y Leonardo III – 43m), Enzo Di Gabro (M/Y LAUL – 39m), Giacomo Seregni (M/Y Severin’s – 55m), Jérémie Gruson (M/Y Victoria del mar – 50m) and Ava Faulkner (M/Y Light Holic – 60m).

The competition’s benchmark is that the chefs only discover the mystery ingredient five minutes before they get to their cooking stations, so quick adaptation and improvisation are the keys.

The public play their role by adding a missing ingredient to the mystery basket and then voting for the best dish.

The Superyacht Chef Competition will take place on 4th April under the aegis of YCM’s La Belle Classe Academy training centre.

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Photo: Prince Albert II, with from left to right: Sabrina Monteleone-Oeino, winner of the 2023 Competition Marco Tognon, and Yannick Aleno (far right). 

France: Car insurance stickers to become a thing of the past

car insurance france

The days of the mandatory requirement for all French vehicles to display valid proof of insurance is coming to an end on 1st April.

As of next month, drivers in France can say goodbye to the little green paper documents signifying proof of insurance that are affixed to the corner of their vehicles’ windscreens.  

Following the passing of a new law in December, a new tool called the Insured Vehicles Index – Fichier des Véhicules Assurés in French – has been established. It connects law enforcement with data held by insurers directly, allowing officials to gain a full picture of a driver’s insurance situation at the click of a button.  

Insurers will be required to continually update the system regarding insurance contract renewals or new policies for cars, commercial vehicles, motorbikes, scooters and any other vehicle that requires insurance.  

The traditional paper form of the carte verte insurance document will be gradually phased out, but insurers will provide contract holders with a document confirming that a vehicle is correctly insured for the rest of 2024 to cover the interim period between new contracts and renewals.  

For more information, click here.

Read related:

Record road deaths force Monaco Police to get tough on drink driving, but how?

 

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Photo source: Benjamin Child, Unsplash

Monaco to host Blue Economy and Finance Forum as part of 2025 UN Ocean Conference

blue economy and finance forum

Days before the 2025 UN Ocean Conference begins in Nice next year, Monaco will play host to the action-oriented Blue Economy and Finance Forum event. Here’s what we know so far.

On 7th and 8th June, the Blue Economy and Finance Forum will gather “private sector actors, businesses, banks, insurance companies, philanthropies and the public sector, such as environmental funds, agencies and development banks” beneath one roof at the Grimaldi Forum Monaco in the hopes of finding solid solutions to gaps in ocean protection and sustainability funding.

The Forum is being touted as an “action-oriented” event and its organisers – the event is a joint effort between the Oceanographic Institute of Monaco, the Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation and the French Organising Committee of UNOC 2025, with the support of the Secretary General of UNOC, Ambassador Laurent Stefanini, and the French Ambassador to Monaco, Jean d’Haussonville – will use the opportunity to connect key players and decision-makers who have the potential to ramp up Blue Financing and other goal-driven ocean projects.  

By making a clear distinction between the maritime economy, which corresponds to all activities directly or indirectly linked to the sea, and the blue economy, widely recognised as the reasonable use of ocean resources via sustainable and regenerative activities that benefit both humankind and nature, the Forum will aim to highlight the beneficial link between economic activities and conservation efforts.  

The Forum’s primary objective, though, is to, by the end of the event, issue a detailed list of recommendations and considerations to international delegations heading to the UN Ocean Conference in Nice in the following days.

The 2025 UN Ocean Conference event in Nice is scheduled to take place from 9th to 13th June 2025.  

Read related:

Nice wins bid to host United Nation’s Ocean Conference in 2025

 

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Photo credit: JC Vinaj / Olivier Huitel / FPA2

The Blues Brothers Approved are coming to Monaco this May

Prepare yourselves for a night of music and mayhem… The Blues Brothers Approved are coming to town! 

For one night only, a theatrical revival of the 1980 cult movie The Blues Brothers will be hitting the stage at the Grimaldi Forum on 3rd May. 

Starring a new duo in the shoes of Jake and Elwood Blues, characters made famous by Dan Ackroyd and John Belushi, the English language show is set to bring a whole lot of rebellious toe-tapping fun to the Principality.  

The tale is about two parentless brothers who have had more than their fair share of brushes with the law. The pair, sporting black Ray Bans, fedoras and ties, become the unlikely heroes of their childhood orphanage, which is run by a rather sinister nun, as they try to save the establishment by any means necessary.  

The ensuing hilarity comes as they re-form their old band, The Blue Brothers, and end up in all sorts of scrapes while simultaneously coming across some of the best musical talent of the era, such as legendary singers Aretha Franklin and Ray Charles. 

In 1995, AMPM Productions brought the magic of this story to the theatre in a tribute show with the tacit blessing of Dan Ackroyd and Judith Belushi, and the result has been a near three decades run of performances all over the world.  

From the Chicago, the “home” city of the brothers, to London’s West End, Europe, Brazil, Australia, Turkey, Africa, the Middle East and Asia, the momentum just keeps on building.  

To find out more and for tickets reservations, click here.

Check out a teaser of the show below:

 

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Photo source: The Blues Brothers Approved

Photos: Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene in Alsace to inaugurate new Grimaldi Historic Site

In a day filled with the past, the Prince and Princess of Monaco created new memories on their 17th March visit to Alsace with a series of ceremonies, meet and greets, and reminders of ancient ties. 

The main mission of Prince Albert II and Princess of Charlene’s visit to the region of Alsace was the welcoming of a new Grimaldi Historic Site into the growing community of towns and villages across France and Italy that have centuries-old ties to the Principality. 

Pictured alongside Mayor Sylvie Renger, the Princely couple proclaimed Feldbach a new member of the Grimaldi Historic Sites network. Photo credit: Manuel Vitali / Monaco Communications Department

The marriage of Louise d’Aumont, Duchess of Mazarin, to the future Prince Honoré IV of Monaco in 1777 gave Monaco the county of Ferrette, which had been granted by King Louis XIV to Cardinal Mazarin in 1659.  

But the history of Ferrette goes back much further, and the region is this year celebrating the 700th anniversary of the 1324 marriage of Jeanne de Ferrette to Archduke Albert II of Habsburg. Prince Albert and Princess Charlene were able to partake in a small part of these commemorative events during their tours of three key communes.   

Feldbach, Donnemarie and Thann 

The trip began for the couple in Feldbach, where they were greeted by Mayor Sylvie Renger.

The Princely couple’s first task was the unveiling of a sign indicating the town as the latest member of the Grimaldi Historic Site of Monaco network, before the mayor took Prince Albert and Princess Charlene to the Saint-Jacques church, a place where “the first counts of Ferrette are buried”.

The Princely couple meet with local officials from three Alsatian towns as well as countless well-wishers. Photo credit: Manuel Vitali / Monaco Communications Department

From Feldbach, the couple went on to Donnemarie, where they were met by Mayor Alexandre Berbett and other local dignitaries, who joined them in inaugurating a new street, the Passage des Comtes de Ferrette.  

Mayor Alexandre Berbett joined Prince Albert and Princess Charlene in formally opening the Passage des Comtes de Ferrette in Donnemarie. Photo credit: Manuel Vitali / Monaco Communications Department

The day came to a conclusion in Thann, where the Prince and Princess attended, alongside the Archduke and Archduchess Rudolf of Habsburg-Lorraine, both descendants of Jeanne de Ferrette and Albert II of Habsburg, official ceremonies marking the 700th anniversary of this important marriage.  

While in Thann, Prince Albert and Princess Charlene visited the collegiate church of Saint-Thiébault. It was here that they were able to see the church’s beautiful organ, an instrument that the Prince has aided in restoring.  

After a traditional lunch, the Princely couple were treated to a choral concert by the Petits Chanteurs de Thann and spent time chatting to a crowd of well-wishers, end the trip on a high note. 

A choral concert by the Petits Chanteurs de Thann brought to a close Prince Albert and Princess Charlene’s visit to Alsace. Photo credit: Manuel Vitali / Monaco Communications Department

 

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Photo credit: Manuel Vitali / Monaco Communications Department