Chapter News

EU and US agree to strengthen coordination on the enforcement of export controls on Russia

The European Commission and the US Commerce Department have agreed to strengthen coordination on the enforcement of export controls on Russia, building on the excellent cooperation under the US-EU Trade and Technology Council. In a meeting in Brussels, Deputy Secretary of Commerce Don Graves, US Ambassador to the European Union Mark Gitenstein and Assistant Secretary for Export Enforcement Matthew Axelrod, discussed export control enforcement with Bjoern Seibert, Head of Cabinet for the President of the European Commission, Ursula von der...

Read more

Member News

Vulcan Insight | EU Commission paves the way for Croatia to join the Euro

As part of its 2022 Convergence Report, the European Commission finally paved the way for Croatia to enter the eurozone. After years on the side lines, the country may now become the twentieth country to join the EU’s common currency. Since joining the European Union as the, at the time, 28th Member State on 1 July 2013, Croatia has been on a steady path of aligning its economic, fiscal and monetary policy to that of the European Central Bank. While, technically, all...

Read more

Member News

Wilson Sonsini | Privacy and Security of Health Information: A Primer for Digital Health Companies

COVID-19 has rapidly accelerated our expectations that virtual connection can deliver better and more economical care. As a result, digital health companies have an unprecedented opportunity to innovate, but with that opportunity also comes significant regulatory challenges related to the collection and processing of personal health information. What legal requirements apply to the processing of health information? What are the risks associated with noncompliance? In this brief primer, we provide answers to these questions, and a window to what...

Read more

Member News

Bennett Jones | Canada Expands Import and Export Bans on Russia

Bans to Cover Luxury Goods, Commercial, Industrial, Medical and Laboratory Equipment and Materials On Friday May 20, 2022, Canada announced amendments to the Special Economic Measures (Russia) Regulations, which were registered and entered into force on May 18, 2022. Notably, these amendments substantially expand the scope of purchase and sale restrictions imposed on Russia to broader categories of goods and new industries. A detailed summary of current sanctions related to the Russia/Ukraine conflict can be found in our previous insight, "Canadian...

Read more

Chapter News

ECB Speech | Preparing for euro area accession

Introductory statement by Fabio Panetta, Member of the Executive Board of the ECB, at the meeting of the Euro Accession Countries Working Group of the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs of the European Parliament | Brussels, 1 June 2022 | Thank you for inviting me to discuss our latest ECB Convergence Report. As foreseen in the EU Treaties, we publish our Convergence Report at least once every two years. The report examines the progress made by non-euro area Member States...

Read more

Chapter News

Convergence Report reviews Member States’ preparedness to join the euro area and paves the way for Croatia’s euro adoption on 1 January 2023

Today, the European Commission has concluded that Croatia is ready to adopt the euro on 1 January 2023, bringing the number of euro area Member States to twenty. The conclusion is set out in the 2022 Convergence Report, which assesses the progress that Bulgaria, Czechia, Croatia, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Sweden have made towards joining the euro area. These are the seven non-euro area Member States that are legally committed to adopting the euro. The Report concludes that: Only Croatia...

Read more

Member News

FTI Consulting | Impacts of COVID-19 and the Increasing Use of Technology for Financial Institutions

This article from ICLG - Anti Money Laundering was published in May 2022. The entire publication is available at: https://iclg.com/practice-areas/anti-money-laundering-laws-and-regulations/7-impacts-of-covid-19-and-the-increasing-use-of-technology-for-financial-institutions The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed vulnerabilities at many banks and financial institutions that increased money laundering activity. A report from the Financial Action Task Force found that criminals were exploiting conditions during the pandemic to bypass customer due diligence, misuse online financial services, exploit economic stimulus programs, and misappropriate financial aid - all increasing the risk of corruption and money...

Read more

Member News

Portolano Cavallo | The Court of Justice of the European union held that Article 17 of the DSM directive is compatible with freedom of expression and information

This article is part of Portolano Cavallo’s “INFORM@Digital & IP” Newsletter. Click here to subscribe | On April 26, 2022, the Court of Justice of the European Union (the “Court”) delivered its judgment (full text of the decision accessible here) in case C-401/19 – Poland vs. European Parliament and Council, concerning the validity of Article 17 Directive (EU) 2019/790 on copyright and related rights in the Digital Single Market (full text accessible here – the “DSM Copyright Directive”). 1. Article 17 DSM Copyright...

Read more

Member News

GDLSK | Further extension of certain covid-related China 301 Exclusions

The USTR has announced that it is further extending certain China 301 exclusions that had been put in place and/or previously extended to help address the COVID-19 pandemic. The 81 exclusions at issue, which had been extended through May 31, 2022, are now being further extended through November 30, 2022. The extensions are effective for goods entered on or after June 1, 2022. We have prepared the below schedule of the COVID-19 exclusions that are impacted by this announcement.  The...

Read more

Chapter News

IMF | Dollar Dominance and the Rise of Nontraditional Reserve Currencies

The US dollar has long played an outsized role in global markets. It continues to do so even as the American economy has been producing a shrinking share of global output over the last two decades. But although the currency’s presence in global trade, international debt, and non-bank borrowing still far outstrips the US share of trade, bond issuance, and international borrowing and lending, central banks aren’t holding the greenback in their reserves to the extent that they once did. As...

Read more