Compliance
Setting Boundaries: Privacy, Transparency Debated In Monaco

Privacy is under assault. Although there have been a few victories, AI, political pressures about wealth and other forces are fuelling the debate on privacy. Industry figures thrashed out the issues in Monaco earlier this month, and your correspondent was part of the debate.
Privacy is a fundamental right in Europe. A ruling by a top
European court in 2022, which shot down the idea of public
registers of beneficial ownership, is an example of how the
battle over legitimate privacy is playing out, a conference in
Monaco heard earlier in March.
As reported
here the Court of Justice of the EU made a decision that
highlighted a fight against the erosion of privacy, Filippo
Noseda, partner, Mishcon de Reya,
told a conference hosted by TrustConsult
Group at Monaco’s Fairmont Hotel. (TrustConsult provides
wealth planning, works in areas such as trusts, private trust
partners, and property. It operates in Luxembourg, Monaco,
Geneva, Belgium and Hong Kong. See here
for the preview article.)
It is worth remembering, Noseda said, that the EU’s enshrining of
privacy as a right several decades ago responded to
totalitarianism on the continent a few decades before.
Noseda, who has led a number of legal challenges on issues such
as beneficial ownership disclosures, was among a number of
experts from the legal, wealth, media and trusts sectors who
looked at different aspects of privacy. They discussed how
financial privacy is under assault, why these attacks have
happened, the balance to be struck with transparency, and the
impact of technologies such as cryptography, digital currencies,
AI and blockchain. (WealthBriefing also interviewed Noseda last year
about privacy.)
Among the points that emerged is that a younger generation does
not appear to be concerned about privacy, but in time they are
likely to be. And recent history, as seen by the demands for
medical data amid the pandemic, the Ed Snowden claims about
domestic US spying, pushback against press intrusion, and other
moves, suggested that there is all to play for in the world of
privacy.
The panels
In the first panel, entitled “Why Privacy Still Matters,”,
several speakers noted the dichotomy between governments
demanding transparency among private individuals and companies,
but not meeting those demands themselves. Christian Bühlmann, CEO
of TrustConsult
Group, for example, said this double standard is not
sustainable. “We have seen the lives of people being ruined by
naming and shaming,” he said.
Fellow panellist Guillaume Grisel, partner, Schellenberg
Wittmer, said that many in financial services and elsewhere
were reluctant to make the case for privacy. “It is first and
foremost a human right,” he said. If the letter of the law is
honoured, the fact that some might dislike such privacy is
irrelevant, Grisel said.
Myret Zaki, journalist at Switzerland’s Bilan
publication, noted the various asset freezes, “leaks” (such as
the Panama Papers case) and others where specific jurisdictions
were in the firing line. Just as notable, she said, is how there
are certain countries that appear to be free from such data leaks
and this suggests there is a power dynamic in play. “You don’t
have London Leaks, Hong Kong Leaks or Delaware Leaks,” she
said.
Claire Ankri-Avyi, lawyer, CMS
Francis Lefebvre Avocats, noted that organisations such as
the European Union and OEOC have been pushing for compliance and
transparency on a number of areas, raising the question of
whether authorities think privacy is important.
Pierre-Jean Douvier, partner at CMS Francis Lefebre Avocats,
noted that as far as possible, Monaco attempts to maintain as
much privacy and confidentiality as possible while going along
with international standards.
Grisel noted that in 2004 progress was made when Princess
Caroline of Monaco won a landmark legal victory when Europe's top
human rights court ruled that the German press had violated her
right to privacy by publishing photographs of her and her
children.
Bilan’s Zaki said specific legal cases were often how
people learned about where the boundaries of privacy are – a
situation likely to continue as more test cases arise, she
said.
Grisel said that it is also important to distinguish between
intentional and unintentional leaks of information, for instance
when a person unwittingly gives away their location to
potentially hostile third parties by not being careful in how
they use social media.
Legalities
In the second panel, entitled “Is privacy still allowed?”
speakers wrestled with how, in Monaco, for example, the
jurisdiction is putting its data protection regime on the same
broad footing as that of the European Union. The principality is
a member of the Council of Europe.
Alex von Stein, managing partner, Spencer Ship
Monaco, told the audience that the jurisdiction is currently
putting the yachts sector under a sharp spotlight, treating it is
an industry that needs to be scrutinised. “It is becoming
untenable for certain types of companies that need to be able to
complete certain transactions on time,” he said. (It was later
noted during this panel that the Council of Europe’s MONEYVAL
group is scrutinising Monaco’s AML controls, suggesting that
local banks and other financial institutions are erring on the
side of caution when taking on clients.)
Maurizio Cohen, managing partner, Interlaw Monaco,
said that the jurisdiction has had a gap to fill regarding AML
laws and processes, and that gap has been tackled. “You need to
[have] an enormous amount of information about clients, reports
from you, counterparties and back, and so forth,” he said. As for
the MONEYVAL evaluation process, Monaco is in the middle of a
review period. There will be a move in a pendulum towards a
position between extremes, he said.
Thierry Boitelle, of Leiden University, and of Boitelle Tax, switched
the focus to Switzerland. He pointed out that for all the changes
to Swiss bank secrecy laws of recent years, domestic Swiss
banking remained covered by bank secrecy. “It is still in place
and we have a level of financial privacy,” he said.
Cécile Civiale Vuillier, partner, TrustConsult Suisse, said of
the Alpine state that it is “one place where we can offer a level
of financial privacy."
Von Stein queried the idea that governments are requiring private
firms to be the police for the system. “That’s not our business,”
he said.
Boitelle said a good way for financial sector figures to frame
the argument for privacy is to talk about security, because this
shows how what is at stake is not just about protecting large
sums of wealth.
Cohen said one force to contend with is social pressure and
concerns about inequality; many people don't care much about
financial privacy because they think the demands for transparency
don’t directly affect them.
When asked about the different topic of AI, Boitelle
highlighted the tension between the desire for complete
data transparency and the need for data protection. The AI
phenomenon creates a “privacy problem on steroids,” he said.
The media perspective
In the third panel, conversation switched to what journalists
think wealthy individuals and families can and should do to
protect themselves from media intrusion, and understand what the
legitimate boundaries should be.
Myret Zaki said one mistake that HNW families and individuals
should avoid is trying to block any interaction with the media at
all. In fact, families that run significant businesses, and
engage in a community, for example, must accept that media
coverage is entirely normal. To manage it, families must be
consistent in how they behave and what they say – it is not
sensible to talk about helping the world and the environment if
one runs a toxic business, for example, she said.
WealthBriefing group editor Tom Burroughes said families
should have a consistent narrative about how they created and
manage their wealth, so that they are ready as and when the
media approaches them.
Also, the cost and work of reputation management demonstrates the
value of family offices, and of advisors who can mentor family
members on how to deal with the media, and so on. Burroughes
said his own experience in educating students about situational
awareness of fake news and social media gave him an insight
into the sort of training that families should look at. He added
that an adversarial approach to the media is not wise, because
good journalists want to talk to wealth creators and
entrepreneurs.
Cryptos and structures
In the fourth and final panel, the discussion switched to how
blockchain/cryptoassets, as well as the use of certain
structures, might be a way to protect privacy in
transactions.
Grégoire Mure, CEO TrustConsult Luxembourg, talked about entities
such as Private Investment Funds, which are used for
structuring and private wealth management.They
allow the private client can act through a general partner,
rather than the fund.
“The fund holds the assets and the assets are managed by the GP.
In that case, the client can keep a degree of privacy in the
investments because the client is not the owner of the fund,” he
said. “Another structuring solution with privacy benefits is
securitisation. This vehicle can organise the dispossession of
assets of a client. In exchange, the client will receive a bond
issued by the securitisation vehicle. Consequently, there is an
opacity because the register for the bonds is not public. In
Luxembourg, securitisation can create a degree of privacy
protection,” he said.
Patrice Sauro, CFO and executive director at TrustConsult Group,
talked about the benefits of blockchain-based financial transfers
in creating a level of robustness and confidentiality. However,
he said there is a footprint on a blockchain – it is a mistake to
think of such tech as a complete protection of
anonymity.
Will Adams, executive director, Private Trust
Partners, argued that privacy only benefits users if it gives
them autonomy, and therefore that crypto-related solutions etc
should not be overly complicated. “If you can ensure ownership,
then you can, for example, insure those assets,” he said.
Ramy Torbey, EPTALEX Law Firm (managing partner in Beirut and
senior partner in the UAE), said that in the United Arab
Emirates, privacy is a “sacred principle.”
“It is trying to commit to transparency and it has got off the
[FATF] grey list,” he said. In 2021, the UAE enacted a personal
data protection law, akin to the European GDPR. The UAE’s company
register involves very strict access conditions, such as
restricting information to certain persons, he said.
Philippe Reynier, CEO of WECAN, talked about the
importance of secure communications. “If your system is hacked,
messages are intercepted or shared with the state…you don’t have
privacy anymore.”
Governments have been cracking down on the use of certain
messaging apps by bankers and others, such as the use of
WhatsApp, he said.
Will Adams added that family offices can, for example, have their
own private “blockchains” that can be kept completely secure.
In summing up the conference, Bühlmann said the discussions
showed that the tensions between privacy and transparency were
not always easy to solve. Nevertheless, it was vital for the
wealth industry, regulators and policymakers to keep seeking a
resolution.
“Thanks to the presence of first class subject matter experts, the event was the opportunity to raise awareness of the audience on the fact that privacy is no longer a given. Privacy must be defended from media, government and anyone that has an interest to break into your personal life – this would inevitably lead to your freedom being at risk, when not representing an immediate and very often harmful threat to yourself,” he added.
(Tom Burroughes writes: I was delighted to be invited to speak at this event and explain a journalist's perspective on privacy, transparency and the balancing act that this gives rise to. The whole private banking/wealth management value proposition must retain the principle of "protecting the client." This is a complex issue; new technologies, social pressures and attitudes mean that the privacy conversation is never static. The editorial team intends to keep the debate bubbling. I also value readers' opinions and suggestions, so please email me at tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com)