European Commission Refers Malta to EU Court of Justice to End Malta Investor Citizenship Program Providing Access to EU Countries, Cyprus Suspended i

European Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen Caproasia.com | The leading source of data, research, information & resource for investment managers, professional investors, UHNW & HNW investors, and advisors to institutions, billionaires, UHNWs & HNWs. Covering capital markets, investments and private wealth in Asia. How do you invest $3 million to $300 million? How do you manage $20 million to $3 billion of assets? Caproasia - Learn more

This site is for accredited investors, professional investors, investment managers and financial professionals only. You should have assets around $3 million to $300 million or managing $20 million to $3 billion.






European Commission Refers Malta to EU Court of Justice to End Malta Investor Citizenship Program Providing Access to EU Countries, Cyprus Suspended in July 2021 & Bulgaria Terminated in April 2022

30th September 2022 | Hong Kong

The European Commission has referred Malta to the European Union (EU) Court of Justice to end Malta Investor Citizenship Program and providing access to EU countries.  Cyprus, which also offers similar citizenship programs had suspended the program in July 2021 and Bulgaria has terminated the program in April 2022.  European Commission: “Investor citizenship schemes allow a person to acquire a new nationality based on pre-determined payments or investments, and in absence of a genuine link with the naturalising country, such as long-term residence. These schemes are different from investor residence schemes (or ‘golden visas’), which allow third-country nationals, subject to certain conditions, to obtain a residence permit to live in an EU country. Both types of schemes pose serious risks, in particular as regards security, money laundering, tax evasion and corruption.”  See below for background and full statement. 

“ European Commission Refers Malta to EU Court of Justice to End Malta Investor Citizenship Program Providing Access to EU Countries, Cyprus Suspended in July 2021 & Bulgaria Terminated in April 2022 “

 


Ads & Announcements


Investor citizenship scheme: Commission refers MALTA to the Court of Justice European Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen

Today, the European Commission has decided to refer Malta to the Court of Justice of the European Union for its investor citizenship scheme, also referred to as the ‘golden passports’. The Commission considers that granting EU citizenship in return for pre-determined payments or investments without any genuine link to the Member State concerned is not compatible with the principle of sincere cooperation enshrined in Article 4(3) of the Treaty on European Union, and with the concept of Union citizenship, as provided for in Article 20 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.

On 20 October 2020, the Commission sent a letter of formal notice to Malta, urging it to end its investor citizenship scheme. The Commission sent an additional letter of formal notice to Malta on 9 June 2021, following the introduction of a new scheme at the end of 2020.

Following Russia’s war against Ukraine, Malta suspended this new scheme for Russian and Belarusian nationals. While this was a positive step, Malta continues to operate the scheme for all other nationalities and has not expressed any intention to end it.

On 6 April 2022, the Commission sent a reasoned opinion to Malta. Malta’s reply did not satisfactorily address the concerns raised by the Commission. Malta is the only remaining Member State that operates such a scheme.

Consequently, the Commission decided today to refer Malta to the Court of Justice of the EU under Article 258(2) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.

Background

EU citizenship and the rights it confers lie at the heart of the EU. Every person that holds the nationality of an EU Member State is at the same time an EU citizen. EU citizenship automatically gives the right to free movement, access to the EU internal market, and the right to vote and to be elected in European and local elections. For these reasons, the conditions for obtaining and losing nationality, regulated by the national law of each Member State, are subject to due respect for EU law.

Investor citizenship schemes allow a person to acquire a new nationality based on pre-determined payments or investments, and in absence of a genuine link with the naturalising country, such as long-term residence. These schemes are different from investor residence schemes (or ‘golden visas’), which allow third-country nationals, subject to certain conditions, to obtain a residence permit to live in an EU country. Both types of schemes pose serious risks, in particular as regards security, money laundering, tax evasion and corruption.

The Commission has been following up on the investor citizenship schemes in other Member States as well.  In October 2020, the Commission also started an infringement procedure against Cyprus for its investor citizenship scheme. Cyprus suspended its scheme and stopped receiving new applications on 1 November 2020. However, as it continued to process pending applications, the Commission decided to send a reasoned opinion to Cyprus on 9 June 2021. Cyprus finished processing all pending applications in July 2021. The Commission is closely analysing the situation before deciding on any next steps.

The Commission has also been in contact with Bulgaria on its investor citizenship scheme. Effective  5 April 2022, Bulgaria abolished the scheme.  Since the launch of the first scheme in 2014 (the ‘individual investor programme’), Malta naturalised several thousand investors and their family members. At the end of 2020, Malta established a new scheme (the ‘Maltese Citizenship by Naturalisation for Exceptional Services by Direct Investment’ scheme), after the original one came close to reaching its limit of 1,800 successful main applicants. The new scheme maintains the principle that nationality can be awarded systematically, in return for pre-determined payments, without having to establish any genuine link between the applicant and Malta. On 2 March 2022, Malta announced that it had suspended, until further notice, the processing of applications from nationals of the Russian Federation and Belarus.

For More Information

Letter of formal notice – 20 October 2020

Additional letter of formal notice – 9 June 2021

Reasoned opinion – 6 April 2022

Infringements database

EU infringements procedure




2021 Data Release
2020 List of Private Banks in Hong Kong
2020 List of Private Banks in Singapore
2020 Top 10 Largest Family Office
2020 Top 10 Largest Multi-Family Offices
2020 Report: Hong Kong Private Banks & Asset Mgmt - $4.49 Trillion
2020 Report: Singapore Asset Mgmt - $3.48 Trillion AUM

Register Below
Latest 2022 data & reports, insights & news
Every Saturday & Sunday 2 pm
Direct to your inbox
Save 2 to 8 hours per week. Organised for success

For Investors | Professionals | Executives


New to Caproasia?
Join 10,000 +
Learn More | Sign Up Today
Caproasia.com | Caproasia Access
2022 Events | TFC - Find Services
Grow Business | Contact Us




For CEOs, Heads, Senior Management, Market Heads, Desk Heads, Financial Professionals, Investment Managers, Asset Managers, Fund Managers, Hedge Funds, Boutique Funds, Analysts, Advisors, Wealth Managers, Private Bankers, Family Offices, Investment Bankers, Private Equity, Institutional Investors, Professional Investors

Get Ahead in 60 Seconds. Join 10,000 +
Save 2 to 8 hours weekly. Organised for Success.

Subscribe / Sign Up / Contact Us

    Sign Up / Subscribe:
    Mailing ListFree TrialPromo $20 MonthlyPromo $180 YearlyInvestor $680 YearlyProfessional $680 YearlyExecutive $680 Yearly

    Membership:
    Financial Professional $60 YearlyWealth Managers $60 YearlyPrivate Bankers $80 YearlyBoutique Advisory $80 YearlyFamily Office $80 YearlyProfessional Investor $80 YearlyInvestment Bankers $80 YearlyPrivate Markets $80 YearlyInvestment Managers $80 YearlyManagement $80 Yearly

    Interests / Events / Summits / Roundtables / Networking:
    Private WealthFamily OfficePrivate BankingWealth ManagementInvestmentsAlternativesPrivate MarketsCapital MarketsESG & SICEO & EntrepreneursTax, Legal & RisksHNW & UHNWs Insights

    Your Name*

    Company*

    Job Title*

    Email 1 (Work / Personal)*

    Email 2 (Work / Personal)

    Contact No.

    Country

    Your Message (leave blank if none)




    Owl Media Group takes pride in providing social-first platforms which equally benefit and facilitate engagement between businesses and consumers and creating much-needed balance to make conducting business, easier, safer, faster and better. The vision behind every platform in the Owl Media suite is to make lives better and foster a healthy environment in which parties can conduct business efficiently. Facilitating free and fair business relationships is crucial for any thriving economy and Owl Media bridges the gap and open doors for transparent and successful transacting. No advertising funds influence the functionality of our media platforms because we value authenticity and never compromise on quality no matter how lucrative the offers from advertisers may seem.

    Originally posted on: https://www.caproasia.com/2022/09/30/european-commission-refers-malta-to-eu-court-of-justice-to-end-malta-investor-citizenship-program-providing-access-to-eu-countries-cyprus-suspended-in-july-2021-bulgaria-terminated-in-april-2022/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=european-commission-refers-malta-to-eu-court-of-justice-to-end-malta-investor-citizenship-program-providing-access-to-eu-countries-cyprus-suspended-in-july-2021-bulgaria-terminated-in-april-2022