Party central: Sporting Monte-Carlo

Sporting Monte-Carlo is back for the summer season with a calendar of dinner shows at Coya restaurant and legendary nights at Jimmy’z nightclub. 

This summer, it’s all happening at Sporting Monte-Carlo.

New for 2022, Coya Restaurant is now putting on “the ultimate dinner show” combining the flavours of Peru with live performances and Latin-inspired DJ sets. Located in the indoor dining room, guests arrive at 8pm on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights for a spectacle transporting them to South America where the fiesta is always in full swing.

Highlights of the menu include Pisco cocktails, Wagyu empanadas, Chilean sea bass and tuna tostadas with Oscietra caviar.

Coya will also be the setting for Noche Blanca on 21st June, where partygoers are asked to dress all in white, and two Rituals nights on 19th July and 9th August, when guests will have the chance to be “spellbound” by a Peruvian tribal ritual. Dancing and cocktails add to the party vibe as well as the techno sounds from the DJ.

Pisco Bar is back as well, offering a selection of drinks and street food from 7pm to 2am.

Sporting Monte-Carlo – Jimmy’z, photo credit: Monte-Carlo SBM

Summer 2022 also sees the return of party nights at Jimmy’z, with the hottest electro DJs coming to play. This season will be dedicated to the memory of Regine, the lady behind this iconic institution, who passed away earlier this year.

Some of the hottest names in electronic dance music have hit the club’s turntables, including Robin Schulz, Michael Calfan, Lost Frequencies, Martin Solveig, Bob Sinclar, Mark Ronson, FatBoy Slim, Big Ali and Benny Benassi.

 

 

Top photo source: Monte-Carlo SBM. This article was originally published on 20th June 2022.

 

2022 Monaco Energy Boat Challenge

A mixture of competitiveness and cooperation, the Monaco Energy Boat Challenge (MEBC) returned to the Principality for its ninth edition showcasing the latest innovations in clean energy and naval engineering.

Whilst providing entertainment for spectators and attendees, including Prince Albert II who visited the paddock on Thursday, the ultimate aim of the event is to be at the cutting edge, facilitating the development of sustainable solutions within yachting.

38 teams from 21 nations descended upon the Monaco Yacht Club (YCM) to showcase their inventions, from hydrogen fuelled vessels, to boats covered in solar panels, there is a diversity in the innovative ecological solutions on display.

Materials engineer of Monégasuqe team SBM Offshore, Kevin Schietsel spoke to Monaco Life about the growth of the event. “We have the impression that the event is really growing. There are more and more exhibitioners. The whole line of exhibitions in the paddock was never there previously. The room behind it is full as well. The event is on the rise! The first year we were here there were only eight of us, now we are 14,” he said.

Photo by Luke Entwistle, Monaco Life

On a competitive level, Schiestel is hoping to beat Italian team UniBoAT, who pipped them to last year’s title. “We’re here for the victory. We have many rivals that are well prepared, two Italian teams that are very, very strong, one of which won last year. Last year we were second just behind them. We hope to beat them but it will be difficult,” said Schiestel.

Although their hydrogen model didn’t work as well as hoped on the first day of competition on Thursday, Schiestel was nonetheless pleased that the model worked. The same can’t be said of all the boats that took to the water of Port Hercule for the opening parade.

Trial and error are, however, essential elements of innovation, and this year’s edition, more than any other, showcases some of the most innovative technologies that they hope can be adopted into the yachting industry. For Bernard d’Alessandri, general secretary of the YCM, the construction of the boats themselves marks a notable milestone.

He told Monaco Life, “We’re no longer at the point of raising awareness, but of taking action. The people here have constructed their own boats; they’re here with solutions, and we’ve moved from ideas to solutions and projects. Everyone is facing this reality, looking at how we can react and change things.”

Photo by Luke Entwistle, Monaco Life

It isn’t just about the boats, but also the engineers and the students that design them. As well as exhibiting some of the most cutting edge nautical technology, the event is also an opportunity to network and share vital expertise and experience.

A series of conferences, tech talks and job forums allow the different teams and exhibitors to pool their knowledge, whilst also providing young talents the opportunity to find jobs and internships within the growing industry that is sustainable yachting.

Back in 1904, Monaco hosted the first meeting of small boats in Monaco, where at the time, they were testing motorisation. Now, in 2022, Monaco perpetuates that tradition of innovation, by maintaining their position at the cutting edge of everything that is new and innovative in a yachting industry that is recognising the need to take an eco shift.

 

 

 

Top photo by Luke Entwistle, Monaco Life

 

 

‘Christian Bérard, Eccentric Baby’

The exhibition ‘Christian Bérard, Eccentric Baby’ has just opened at Villa Paloma, presented by the New National Museum of Monaco (NMNM).

The exhibition brings together more than 300 paintings, drawings, photographs and interior decorations, retracing the life of Christian Bérard (1902-1949).

Affectionately nicknamed “Baby” by his friends, Bérard was a painter, illustrator, scenographer, fashion designer, decorator and costume designer for theatre and cinema, and was a major artistic figure of the 1930s and 1940s.

Over three floors of Villa Paloma, the exhibition examines his numerous stays in the south, in particular in Monaco where he worked with the Ballets Russes, and his multiple collaborations with the likes of Jean Cocteau, Louis Jouvet, Christian Dior and Gabrielle Chanel.

Chief Curator of the NMNM Célia Bernasconi was curator of the exhibition, while decorator Jacques Grange was in charge of the staging. Guest artist Nick Mauss has laid out a journey that has no chronological order or classification by discipline, but addresses the three major themes in the work and life of the artist: the Interiors, the Marvelous and the Mediterranean.

‘Christian Bérard, Eccentric Baby’ is on show at Villa Paloma, 56 boulevard du Jardin Exotique, until 16th October 2022

Photo by Michael Alesi, Government Communication Department

 

 

 

Venturi team member completes epic commemorative adventure

A trekking mission across a remote Norwegian island, first completed by Prince Albert I, has been repeated over a century later by eco-explorer Xavier Chevrin, of Monaco-based Venturi, who was greeted at the end by Prince Albert II.

Strapped into a pair of cross-country skis, eco-explorer Xavier Chevrin took on the task of travelling more than 220 kilometres in the snow to retrace the steps of Prince Albert I on Spitsbergen, a Norwegian island roughly 900 kilometres from the North Pole.

Between 1898 and 1907, the great-grandfather and namesake of Prince Albert II mapped this distant isle from the sea, along the way naming the sites and features that he saw. Included in the list are Grimaldi Mountain, the Monaco Glacier, Prince Albert I Mountain and Princess Alice Mountain.

“We are honoured to have paid tribute to Prince Albert I through this exceptional adventure,” said Gildo Pastor. “Everything I do with Venturi, I do for my country, to raise the Monegasque flag high. I wanted to show Prince Albert II the esteem I have for Prince Albert I; for the work he has done in favour of sustainable development, a work that our Sovereign tirelessly pursues.”

Prince Albert and Gildo Pastor, photo by Eric Mathon/Prince’s Palace 

On Sunday 26th June at 11:30am, at the bottom of Princess Alice Mountain, Xavier Chevrin was welcomed by Prince Albert II. The Sovereign was accompanied by the President of Venturi, Gildo Pastor. The three men have much in common with “The Explorer Prince, Prince Albert I, including the defence of the environment, a passion for adventure and a knack for teamwork.

“I am proud to have worn the colours of Venturi and the Principality to pay tribute to the memory of Prince Albert I,” said Chevrin of his trek. “As a representative of Monaco, I achieved two world firsts linked to the Principality: with my guides, we climbed the ‘Kapp Guissez’ thus named in homage to Lieutenant Théodore Guissez, member of Albert’s crew, and we also set foot on the Albert I glacier.”

The time after the trek was spent swapping stories and experiences, notably Chevrin’s observation that less than a thousand kilometres from the North Pole there was a dramatic absence of coastal ice.

The trek and the participants were worthy of The Explorer Prince, and would have no doubt made him proud today.

 

 

Photo of Xavier Chevrin and Prince Albert II by Eric Mathon/Prince’s Palace 

 

 

 

 

“We are licensed and regulated and still offer the benefits of DeFi”

Brad Yasar is the CEO of EQIFi, the only decentralised finance platform backed by a leading digital bank. 

We caught up with Brad Yasar at the recent CoinAgenda forum at Le Meridien, where he was presenting his company EQIFi, a platform designed to bring the familiarity and reliability of traditional banking to the world of DeFi. This is how it works.

Monaco Life: What was the motivation behind creating EQIFi? 

Brad Yasar: My partner, Jason Blick, and I identified a disconnect between traditional banking and decentralised finance (DeFi) and decided we wanted to try to bridge that gap.

We’re looking to address one major problem – negative interest rates. People put their money in banks and watch it diminish every year. The truth is, it doesn’t have to be this way. DeFi provides a solution to that problem.

Many people are curious about these potential DeFi returns and how it’s even possible, but they don’t understand the technology behind it. This is something we wanted to solve. We wanted my grandma, for example, to be able to use an EQIFi DeFi product and see positive results.

We can’t change banking overnight, but we wanted to demonstrate that you can be licensed and regulated and still offer the benefits of DeFi and crypto.

This was the genesis of EQIFi. We have the banking component in EQIBank, but coupled with DeFi returns and potential positive interest rate returns on our products and services, we can offer a really attractive proposition. And we will make it so simple that even those unfamiliar with crypto can use it and feel comfortable when doing so.

What percentage are you providing in terms of interest rates?

It differs depending on the product. We have market-rate products that were returning up to 70% APY. Interest rate products are different. It’s a matter of risk. Market-rate products correct with the market fluctuations.

In total, we have four products at the moment. The product on stable points, the crypto version of dollars and euros, is pegged one-to-one. Those return single-digit returns, 7 to 8%. Then we have a bitcoin product that returns at 4 to 5%. That’s for people who want to hold onto their bitcoin, hoping it’ll skyrocket.

We also have two market-rate products that have provided 40% and 70% returns this year.

With markets crashing, we are correcting too, but we are still beating the market, so our returns are as good as, if not better, anything else out there.

We try to be conservative. We don’t promise anything we can’t deliver on, and if we can better our expectations, it’s a great position to be in.

It’s a high-risk investment, then?

The risks are commensurate with expected returns. If you expect to double your money every year and earn 50, 60, or 70%, there is obviously risk attached. When people say they want these returns without risk, we do our best to let them know it doesn’t work that way. There are plenty of companies collapsing – just recently USDT and Terra Luna – that should teach us all that you can’t guarantee 20% returns to everyone who holds an asset without questioning where its value comes from.

The United States is in the process of negotiating regulations for the DeFi market. Are you waiting on any word from them?

US regulation impacts everyone globally because the US has been an economic leader for centuries and also because they take an enforcement position globally in these matters. We are licenced and regulated out of the Caribbean, Dominica, and BVI, so our regulators are more nimble. We are regulated, but we aren’t affected by other jurisdictions.

What we’re looking for is regulation that allows for a framework. It helps platforms like EQIFi who are trying to improve constantly but know the limitations on what should or should not be attempted. I want to see regulation that supports innovation. Those places that impose roadblocks get left behind.

The US has become too strict, and other jurisdictions are more welcoming and enabling. So, we’re looking for clear guidance, not punishment, on how to build a future that makes people comfortable.

There should be a code of conduct that serves a purpose.

Mainstream banks are now starting to offer crypto options. What does this mean for smaller companies like yours?

It means validation. We believe we are several years ahead of any potential competitor with a full banking license like us. Traditional banks are taking crypto seriously now, which is great. The clients are driving this force, though, not the banks themselves, but still, the change is good. It’s gratifying when the big institutions recognise bitcoin as an asset and allow people to borrow and lend against it. It shows a shift in mindset.

We want to lead the way and set exemplary standards in this field.

How do you get clients to trust you?

How does any bank do it?

Once you’re licensed and regulated, all background checks are done, and a third party is watching over what you’re doing. That was a hard step to take, but now that we’re there, people are confident. We are also transparent; we don’t hide behind an alias or our location online. We don’t think being anonymous means being free like some others do. We also create an insurance framework by being good custodians, but there are mechanisms outside of us to protect clients.

What is your balance sheet? 

We started in August 2021, we have over 30,000 users, over $30 million locked on the platform at the end of 2021, and we’ve grown very nicely. We haven’t done audits this year, we do them annually, but we are on track to show similar growth to last year. We plan to grow and reach targets for the year, meaning 100,000 users by the end of 2022. And we’re looking at a total value of $250 million locked. Let’s see if we can still reach those targets.

Do you believe we are in a bear market? Do you have any advice?

I think we have been in a bear market since last October. People are expecting a huge bubble, like the .com bubble. The reason that burst was for five years, investors had no visibility into the liquidity of their investments. It may have grown, but all you got was a yearly update saying they were “building” something, until one day they came back and said they were broke. Investors didn’t have the opportunity to make adjustments.

Crypto is so liquid that it’s burst several times, more significant than the crash of 2018, but it continues to grow. I think crypto is here to stay. If there is an uptick in the summer, that will carry through, just as a downturn will carry through the summer similarly.

I tell people that if you’re already in the market and have losses, unless there’s a reason to realise them, don’t take the loss. Stay in.

This needs to be a four-year cycle. Be patient, don’t pull out in months. Let it play out. Bear markets are good times to invest. Now is the time to get in, not get out.

 

Photo by Monaco Life

 

 

 

Princess launches NFT for new charity project

Princess Charlene has started a new project that is combining the latest craze in cryptocurrency, the non-fungible token, and art for the benefit of her latest charitable venture, Feed2gether, which aims to provide food to needy children in her native South Africa.

After the long months of absence due to health problems, Princess Charlene is firmly back in the saddle, launching projects and making plans for the future.

As revealed on her Instagram page on Wednesday 6th July, the 44-year-old Princess is “excited” about her latest venture – being part of an NFT digital art collection by artist Junaid Sénéchal-Senekal where she lent her image to raise funds for her new Feed2gether project. It will be run through the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation in collaboration with Golfer Louis Oosthuizen’s Foundation57.

The artwork is a sepia-toned portrait of the elegant Princess broken into squares and is called OurVisionTogether.

The Princess herself seems very pleased with the work, praising the artist on social media saying, “Thank you to the artist @junaidssart who put his heart and soul into this creation, as well as his health for fasting for the entire duration of this work, by doing what he experienced is a tragic reality for many and something most take for granted every day, it highlights the importance of this project.”

The Children’s Institute of Cape Town estimates that 10%, or 2.1 million South African children, live in households where there is not enough to eat. Of these, 600,000 experience perpetual hunger.

“Together we will be collaborating on a project, a feeding scheme, that will help communities in developing areas to have access to food,” Princess Charlene explained in a video that she made as the programme was being created and she was still recovering in South Africa. “Food is vitally important for children between the ages of one and six for their brain development. The ambition is to give opportunity and the right for people to grow strong and healthy in our country. This can and will be done.”

The Feed2gether initiative aims to benefit children as well as the community and society at large. They have a goal to raise funds to finance the production of iPapa57’s specially formulated maize product that will feed many children between the ages of three and five.

Charlene has dedicated much of her spare time to charitable causes, including her own Foundation which has a focus on water safety, and the rhino anti-poaching charity she went to South Africa to be a part of last year.

Additionally, she has been seen at several events over the past months, including appearances at the Grand Prix in May, a high-profile official trip to Norway and a visit to the Princess Grace Hospital where she spent time with newborns and their mothers in a belated Mother’s Day event.

This spectacular return to public life has been a boost to the Principality, who had missed seeing their Princess in action.