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Advice or Discretionary Management in Luxembourg Private Banking: Who Decides the Investment?

Investment advice versus discretionary portfolio management:

The line between investment advice and discretionary portfolio management is one of the most frequently blurred in Luxembourg private banking — and one of the most expensive to get wrong. The legal distinction is simple: who makes the final investment decision. The operational consequences are anything but.

Investment advice is a personal recommendation to a client, at the client’s request or at the firm’s initiative, concerning one or more transactions in financial instruments. The client decides whether to act. Discretionary portfolio management, by contrast, is the management of portfolios under client mandates on a discretionary, client-by-client basis. The manager decides, within the perimeter the mandate defines.

Key takeaways

The framework captures more than investment firms and credit institutions. UCITS management companies and external alternative investment fund managers also fall within scope when they provide individual portfolio management or investment advice. CSSF Circular 23/835, which applies the ESMA suitability guidelines, has applied from 3 October 2023.

When providing either service, the firm must obtain the necessary information on the client’s knowledge and experience, financial situation, ability to bear losses, investment objectives, and risk tolerance. The compliance chain runs from client-information collection through product understanding, suitability assessment, contractual documentation, suitable reporting, and — where switching is involved — a cost-benefit analysis before action.

Three documentary layers must align: the client classification and suitability file, the contractual mandate or advisory terms, and the investment or execution records. Audit failures rarely turn on the recommendation itself. They turn on the gap between what was promised at onboarding, what was contracted in the mandate, and what was recorded at execution.

The practical discipline is to align onboarding, mandate wording, classification, product governance, investment notes, and client reporting so that the file tells one coherent story. The more discretion is transferred to the bank or manager, the more important it becomes to evidence portfolio-level suitability, product governance, and ongoing monitoring.

Conclusion

Luxembourg’s private banking ecosystem — funds, cross-border clients, custody, and execution sitting close together — makes clear allocation of decision-making authority commercially essential and legally disciplined. The investment service model is not a branding choice. It is a mandate-design discipline, and the test sits in the file.

Listen to the episode

– Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/investment-advice-versus-discretionary-portfolio-management/id1811791497?i=1000767645537

– Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4GiLSTH3KyjOUFjmWgxtzU

– YouTube (BMA): https://youtu.be/YMVMtcIjztg

– YouTube (Rigore Media): https://youtu.be/R1B80DUWjZs

Subscribe for the full series

– YouTube – Bertrand Mariaux Avocats: https://youtube.com/@bertrandmariaux

– YouTube – Rigore Media: https://youtube.com/@rigoremedia

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