About the EIF
Capital and Shareholders (At 31.12.2022)
The EIF has an authorised capital of €7 370m, divided into 7,370 shares with a nominal value of €1m each. As at 31 December 2022, 7,300 shares were subscribed and the EIB held 59.4% (4,336) of the issued shares, the EU represented by the EC held 30% (2,190 shares) and 38 financial institutions held 10.6% (774 shares).
Country Financial Institutions
Numbers of shares
Austria - 21
UniCredit Bank Austria AG - 8
Raiffeisen Bank International AG - 7
Erste Group Bank AG - 5
Austria Wirtschaftsservice Gesellschaft mbH (aws) - 1
Bulgaria - 5
Bulgarian Development Bank AD (BDB) - 5
Croatia- 13
Croatian Bank for Reconstruction and Development (HBOR) - 13
Czech Republic - 5
Národní rozvojová banka, a.s. - 5
Denmark - 8
Vækstfonden - 8
France - 175
Bpifrance Participations - 167
BPCE - 8
Germany - 238
KfW Bankengruppe - 167
NRW.BANK - 20
LfA Förderbank Bayern - 18
Landeskreditbank Baden-Württemberg Förderbank (L-Bank) - 13
Sächsische Aufbaubank - Förderbank (SAB) - 10
ProCredit Holding AG & Co. KGaA - 5
Bürgschaftsbank Baden-Württemberg GmbH - 5
Greece - 3
National Bank of Greece S.A. (NBG) - 3
Hungary - 5
MFB Hungarian Development Bank Private Limited Company - 5
Ireland - 10
Strategic Banking Corporation of Ireland Designated Activity Company (SBCI) - 10
Italy- 87
Cassa Depositi e Prestiti S.p.A. (CDP) - 82
Intesa Sanpaolo S.p.A. - 5
Luxembourg - 13
Banque et Caisse d'Epargne de l'Etat Luxembourg (BCEE) - 13
Malta - 24
Bank of Valletta p.l.c. - 24
Poland - 8
Bank Gospodarstwa Krajowego (BGK) - 8
Portugal - 15
Caixa Geral de Depósitos S.A. - 8
Banco Português de Fomento, S.A. - 4
Banco BPI S.A. - 3
Slovenia - 25
SID banka, d.d., Ljubljana - 25
Spain - 91
Instituto de Crédito Oficial (ICO) -49
Banco Santander, S.A. - 33
Nuevo MicroBank, S.A.U. - 5
Agencia de Innovación y Desarrollode Andalucía (IDEA) - 4
The Netherlands - 5
Invest-NL N.V. - 5
Turkey - 13
Industrial Development Bank of Turkey (TSKB) - 8
Technology Development Foundation of Turkey (TTGV) - 5
United Kingdom - 10
Barclays Funds Investments Limited (BFIL) - 5
Scottish Enterprise - 5
Total - 774
Board of Directors (At 31.12.2022)
Chairman Gelsomina VIGLIOTTI2 Vice-President, European Investment Bank, Luxembourg
Members3 Merete CLAUSEN Director of Directorate C, Investment, Directorate-General for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs, European Commission, Belgium
Ambroise FAYOLLE
Vice-President, European Investment Bank, Luxembourg
Pascal LAGARDE Executive Director in charge of International Affairs, Strategy, Development and Research, Bpifrance Participations, France
Marinela PETROVA Director of European Affairs and Economic Analyses Directorate, Ministry of Finance, BulgariaEva WITT
Markus SCHULTE Principal Advisor for MFF, InvestEU and the relations with EIB and IFIs, Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs, European Commission, Belgium
Alternates members
Peter BERKOWITZ Director, Directorate B, Policy, Directorate-General for Regional and Urban Policy, European Commission, Belgium
Armands EBERHARDS Deputy State Secretary, Ministry of Finance of the Republic of Latvia
Werner HOYER4 President, European Investment Bank, Luxembourg
Jean-Christophe LALOUX Director General, Head of Operations, European Investment Bank, Luxembourg
Anna PANAGOPOULOU Director of Directorate A, ERA & Innovation, Directorate-General for Research and Innovation, European Commission, Belgium
Kristina SARJO Financial Counsellor, Director of Unit for International Financial Affairs, Ministry of Finance, Finland
Mark SCICLUNA BARTOLI Executive - Product Management and Development, Business Banking, Bank of Valletta, Malta
2. The Board of Directors elected Gelsomina VIGLIOTTI as Chair on 15 December 2022. She was appointed as member of the Board of Directors, to complete the term of office of Werner HOYER, by decision of the General Meeting dated 24 November 2022.
3. The appointment of a member to complete the remaining term of office of Marc DESCHEEMAECKER is pending, following his resignation from the Board of Directors, effective 15 November 2022, in connection with his resignation from the EIB’s Board of Directors.
4. Werner HOYER was appointed as alternate member of the Board of Directors, to complete the term of office of Gelsomina VIGLIOTTI, by decision of the General Meeting dated 24 November 2022.
EIF Management
Executive management
Alain Godard5
Chief Executive
Roger HAVENITH Deputy Chief Executive.
Directors
Hubert COTTOGNI Head of Mandate Management
Maria LEANDER6 Secretary General, Head of Legal
Rebecca LEHMANN Head of Human and Resources Management
Jobst NEUSS Chief Risk Officer, Head of Risk Management
Markus SCHILLO Chief Operating Officer, Head of Operations and Information Management
Alessandro TAPPI Chief Investment Officer, Head of Equity Investments and Guarantees
Audit Board
Chair
Jacek DOMINIK
General Counsel, Ministry of Finance, Poland
Members
Georgiana VAN ROMPUY Assistant to the Director-General, Internal Audit Service, European Commission, Belgium
Sergio SIERRA Head of Funding and Treasury, Instituto de Crédito Oficial, Spain
Alternate member
José Manuel PACHO SANCHEZ
Director-General for Corporate Resources, Instituto de Crédito Oficial, Spain
5. Alain GODARD’s term of office ended on 31/12/22. On 1/1/23 Marjut FALKSTEDT took over as Chief Executive.
6. Maria LEANDER retired on 30/9/22 and was replaced by Nicolas PANAYOTOPOULOS as Secretary of the EIF as from 30/5/22.
7. By decision of the General Meeting dated 27 September 2022, the composition of the Audit Board was increased to six members, to be nominated by the shareholding groups with the following proportion: three members nominated by the EIB, two members nominated by the European Commission and one nominated by the financial institutions. Effective 12 January 2023, the General Meeting appointed Rossella LOCATELLI and Delphine REYMONDON as members of the Audit Board. The third member to be nominated by the EIB will be proposed for appointment in due course.
Audit and Controls
The EIF is characterised by a multi-layered control environment embedded in the EU institutional framework and aligned with the financial sector’s principles and best practices.
The EIF’s first layer of control is exercised through internal processes and procedures developed and implemented by the Executive Management by means of financial and operational controls designed to enable effective and efficient day-to-day operations, ensure reliable financial reporting, compliance with applicable rules and policies and achieve the EIF’s objectives.
In this context, the EIF’s procedural and organisational framework sets out the competences, authorities and reporting lines within the EIF, with a view to ensuring segregation of duties both horizontally, through the interaction between front office, middle office and back office services and vertically, through central control by the Board of Directors of the decision-making process in relation to all business activities.
The second layer of control consists of independent risk and compliance functions, which implement an ex-ante risk assessment and reporting framework for each transaction proposed for approval, complemented by ex-post risk monitoring where relevant (see sections on Risk Management and Legal Service).
The EIF maintains an Internal Control Framework (ICF) and produces an ICF report annually. The ICF relies in particular on a risk control matrix outlining the main risks to which the EIF is exposed. Through the ICF, the Executive Management is in a position to obtain the necessary comfort that key risks related to the EIF’s business activities are properly identified, that control objectives are defined, that significant risks are mitigated and that the controls designed to achieve these objectives are in place and are operating effectively.
Each year the ICF is complemented with an independent opinion from an external audit firm on the design and effectiveness of the key controls of the mandate-related processes throughout the year, in line with the internationally recognised ISAE-3402 standard (type 2 report).
The ICF and the ISAE-3402 reports form the basis for the confirmation by the Chief Executive to the Audit Board that the main risks have been identified and mitigated throughout the reporting period.
The risks, control objectives and agreed improvements described in the ICF are reviewed by Internal Audit, which, on the basis of the audits and the follow-up on agreed action plans performed, expresses an opinion on the achievement of the control objectives in the audited areas and on the design and effectiveness of the related internal controls.
The third layer includes both internal and external audit activities that are coordinated by the Audit Board. The Audit Board, as an oversight and controlling body, conducts its activity in accordance with the standards of the audit profession and relies on both internal and external audit assurances in order to confirm annually that, to the best of its knowledge and judgement, the operations of the EIF have been carried out in compliance with the Statutes and the Rules of Procedure and that the financial statements give a true and fair view of the financial position of the EIF as regards its assets and liabilities and of the results of its operations for the financial year under review. This information is included in the annual report submitted by the Board of Directors to the EIF’s Annual General Meeting.
In order to discharge its duty in relation to the financial statements, the Audit Board may have recourse to external auditors. The audit of the financial statements of the EIF for the year ending 31 December 2022 was carried out by KPMG Luxembourg, as external auditor.
KPMG performs its audits in accordance with the International Standards on Auditing (ISA) and is committed to informing the EIF Executive Management and the Audit Board of any material weaknesses in the design or implementation of internal controls over financial information that come to its attention during the audit of the financial statements. While performing the audit of the annual accounts, KPMG is acting independently, fulfilling the duty imposed on it by the Code of Professional Ethics adopted in Luxembourg by the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF).
Internal Audit (which is outsourced to EIB Internal Audit) examines and evaluates, on an independent and objective basis, the relevance, design and effectiveness of the internal control systems and procedures within the EIF.
To that end, a yearly audit plan covering all key processes of the EIF, including those to be assessed at EIB Group level, is established, on the basis of a risk-assessment methodology, in alignment with the ICF. The plan is discussed with the Executive Management and the external auditor prior to being submitted to the Audit Board for approval.
In line with the Internal Audit Charter, Internal Audit examines the EIF’s activities in order to support the Executive Management’s statement on the design and effectiveness of internal controls, risk management and administration. Internal Audit reports on its findings by means of recommendations and agreed action plans to improve the EIF’s control and working procedures.
The Head of Internal Audit reports regularly on the execution of the internal audit programme to the Executive Management, the Audit Board and the Chairman of the Board of Directors. Internal Audit adheres to the professional and ethical guidance issued by the Institute of Internal Auditors and the Information Systems Audit and Control Association and is subject to a regular quality assurance and improvement programme that covers all aspects of the internal audit activity. Moreover, Internal Audit shall comply with the internal policy statements governing their actions.
In addition to the maintenance of an internal control environment in line with the highest standards of the financial and banking sector, the EIF is subject to periodic reviews by independent control bodies such as the European Court of Auditors (ECA), the Internal Audit Service of the EC and national or regional authorities entrusted with the task of monitoring the correct utilisation of funds under the relevant rules and within their respective remits.
Risk Management
The EIF’s mission is supported through a robust and coherent approach to risk management which seeks to ensure the highest quality standards for its operations and the best corporate rating from the major rating agencies.
Risk Management is based on the so-called “three-lines-of-defence” model, which permeates all areas of the EIF’s business functions and processes. These are first line – front office; second line – independent risk management and compliance; and third line – internal and external audit.
The COVID-19 pandemic continued to affect global economic instabilities and uncertainties prevailed over the reporting period. As part of EIB Group, the EIF provided a key contribution to the financial support of European SMEs in this difficult economic environment. The EIF more than doubled its pre-pandemic business volume in 2021 and this continuous high level of growth of the EIF’s transaction volumes not least challenged the capacities of Risk Management in the context of its ex-ante risk analysis of transactions and risk surveillance of EIF’s transaction portfolios.
As an additional challenge in the difficult transactional environment, EIF Risk Management also stood in the centre of intra-Group efforts to harmonise and align risk policies and procedures with best banking and market practices. This required specific contributions from EIF Risk Management to the implementing of the Group Risk Management Framework on the basis of the Group Risk Management Charter and the integration of various key risk considerations into Group documents, such as the Group ICAAP and ILAAP, the Group Risk Appetite Framework and the Group Capital Plan under the lead of the Group Chief Risk Officer.
During the year, EIF risk management has strengthened its processes, procedures and reinforced the resources allocated to the risk functions. Furthermore, contribution to Group alignment projects has advanced, considering an alignment when applicable while maintaining EIF specificities. Notably, EIF Risk Management has:
- strengthened the risk assessment of its operations and monitoring of its portfolio by enhancing its securitisation model;
- successfully finalised the implementation of the risk monitoring and risk reporting for new mandates such as EGF;
- contributed to Group Risk Management activities and data management projects (BCBS 239) as well as strengthened the cooperation on information security;
- improved key internal processes and resources including the risk assessment of new mandates;
- further developed the EIF Risk Appetite Framework and Risk Appetite Statement and enlarged the coverage of non-financial risk key indicators;
- increased the EIBG cooperation through intra-Group harmonisation and work on increasing the consistency of risk models and procedures, when necessary, with best banking and market practices;
- enhanced the environmental and social sustainability framework and its application to operations;
- enhanced its liquidity risk indicators and reviewed its contingency funding plan;
- improved the visibility of the impact of investments with the first contribution to the EIBG SDG report.
Compliance
Under the terms of its Compliance Charter, the Compliance function assesses - in line with best market practices and in line with the EIB Group’s policy framework – the (i) institutional, (ii) transactional and (iii) ethical aspects of the EIF’s compliance risk.
The principles of permanence and independence are included in the EIF Compliance Charter and materialise through the unrestricted direct access of the Chief Compliance Officer to the Chief Executive, the Deputy Chief Executive, the Board of Directors and the Audit Board.
The EIF’s compliance risk assessment strives to protect the institution, notably against risks that could have an adverse effect on its reputation.
The compliance risk assessment in the transactional area follows a risk-based approach and is reflected in the independent compliance opinion provided to the EIF decision-making bodies. It is implemented through compliance risk scorings provided in the compliance opinions, in particular on the risk of the EIF being involved (or used) in (i) money laundering and terrorism financing cases and (ii) tax avoidance schemes.
Specific compliance risk assessments and applicable monitoring activities are established and performed for market abuse, conflicts of interest and conduct topics.
The Compliance Function provides training and raises awareness on compliance matters and implements the EIB Group Staff Code of Conduct and Whistleblowing Policy with a view to instilling a culture of integrity throughout the EIF. As such, an advisory and decision-making role on ethics and integrity issues is ensured through the provision of opinions and recommendations to support strict compliance with the principles and high standards of professional ethics and integrity.
In line with applicable best banking and market practices, the EIF continues to pursue a number of compliance initiatives across the EIB Group for the purpose of establishing a modern and robust compliance framework, taking into account the interests and specificities of the EIF.
Data protection
In order to ensure compliance with the data protection regulation for EU institutions and bodies (Regulation EU 2018/1725), the Data Protection Officer (DPO) took a number of initiatives, including but not limited to:
- giving regular training to staff and senior management;
- providing ongoing support to the EIF Services;
- keeping data protection procedures up to date;
- supporting the publication of relevant privacy statements and the regular update of the Records of Processing Activities (RoPA);
- implementing a tailor-made surveillance programme aimed at verifying EIF ongoing compliance with the data protection regulation;
- ensuring effective cooperation with the European Data Protection Supervisor.
Legal Services
The EIF is supported by a strong in-house legal team whose remit, within its area of responsibility, is to pursue the strategic goals and protect and preserve the legal integrity of the Fund. This is achieved through the provision of legal advice based on the expertise and specialist knowledge of the team throughout the lifecycle of all the EIF’s transactional activities and in connection with institutional, strategic and policy-related matters, objectives that are reflected in the legal team’s internal structure.
With regard to transactions, in order to address increasing business volumes and the strategic goal of achieving performance gains through specialisation, the transactions team is split into two divisions, one focused on debt transactions and the other on equity transactions.
The legal service’s transaction teams work on all stages of transaction implementation, including (i) structuring and product development, (ii) review of proposals to the Investment and Risk Committee and the EIF’s Board of Directors, (iii) contractual negotiations and (iv) active portfolio management, in each case in close collaboration with other EIF services.
In terms of institutional and corporate matters, the legal service supports the implementation of good corporate governance, coordinates and advises on contractual arrangements at institutional level. The legal service aims to ensure that the EIF conducts its activities in accordance with its Statutes, mission and values, applicable law and relevant contractual obligations. It further aims to ensure smooth functioning of the EIF’s corporate bodies, under the coordination of the EIF’s Secretary General.
As a European Union body, a member of the EIB Group and a financial institution, institutional matters concerning the EIF cover a wide range of areas and at times necessitate cooperation with the EIF’s shareholders, as well as specific and proactive attention to the development of EU policy and legislative and governance frameworks.
In addition, the legal service is called upon to advise on numerous structuring, corporate, governance and regulatory matters relating to third party mandates, including external structures (funds-of-funds), for which the EIF acts as manager and/or adviser.
In order to create the necessary interface between the EIF’s institutional role, its mandate management activity and transaction delivery, the activities of the transactions and the corporate and institutional teams are closely coordinated, with the aim of providing seamless advice and expertise across the EIF’s business.
Contact and References
European Investment Fund
37b, avenue J. F Kennedy
L-2968 Luxembourg
Phone +352 2485-1 | Fax +352 2485 81200
info@eif.org
EIF also has offices in Athens, Bucharest, Istanbul, Madrid, Rome, Sofia.
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Disclaimer
Numbers in the EIF Annual Report are correct as at 31 December 2022 and any references to figures throughout the text apply to the same period unless otherwise stated. EIF’s 2022 figures related to SME outreach and employment including the estimated numbers and sustained jobs are indicative only and are based on reports received from financial intermediaries between 1 October 2021 and 30 September 2022. EIF assumes no liability for the accuracy thereof. The EIF shall not be held responsible for the use that might be made with the information contained herein. Reproduction is authorised provided the source is acknowledged. For any use or reproduction of photos or other material that is not under the EIF’s copyright, permission must be sought directly from the copyright holders.
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