Luxembourg has always been an outsider in Europe, often labelled as a tax haven for companies. Whereas the National Bank of Belgium offers open access to three years of historical annual accounts for a limited fee via a licence and an API, Luxembourg has closed its doors. Until recently, the information could still be scraped, but new security measures have completely blocked that route.
The consequences are obvious:
- No API, no licence, no bulk access.
Anyone who wants information must request each annual report separately. This is a costly and therefore unfeasible operation for data providers and analysts.
- Everyone is in the same boat.
No player focusing on the Luxembourg business information market has full access anymore.
However, Luxembourg has around 145,000 companies, of which around 80% are required to publish their balance sheets. This percentage is much higher than in Belgium, which should promote transparency. But public access to this data has virtually disappeared.
This is no coincidence. The country built its financial appeal precisely on secrecy, discretion and limited transparency. Transparency is not a priority there, but a threat to the established model.
‘The quality of business information in Luxembourg will therefore always be inferior to that found in other countries. There is no other explanation. It is simply in the country's DNA, which every data provider has to deal with,’ says Peter Gazelle, Managing Director of GraydonCreditsafe.
This development is part of a broader trend in which Luxembourg, together with Liechtenstein, applies a minimalist interpretation of European transparency rules. Although there are EU directives that require companies to publish annual accounts, national implementation remains limited. Or deliberately cumbersome.