Europe’s financial landscape is as diverse as the continent itself — 27 economies, dozens of regulatory frameworks, and a mosaic of banking traditions, capital markets, and fintech ecosystems. That complexity is what makes it fascinating, but it also makes it hard to follow as a whole.
EU Finance News was founded in 2026 with a single mission: to unify and bridge the European financial story. We believe every ECB decision, every fintech raise in Warsaw, every banking merger in Madrid, and every regulatory shift in Brussels deserves clear, authoritative coverage — not fragmented across dozens of national outlets.
We cover markets, banking, fintech, investment, regulation, macroeconomics, and capital markets across all 27 EU member states and the broader European economic area. Our editorial team is embedded across the continent, giving us the local intelligence to track stories that pan-European financial media misses.
Maurizio oversees editorial direction and strategy across all coverage areas. With a background spanning European financial media and business journalism, he ensures EU Finance News delivers accurate, timely, and authoritative reporting on the continent’s financial markets and economic landscape.
Sophie covers the financial centres of Paris, Amsterdam, and Brussels — from CAC 40 movements and French sovereign debt to Dutch pension funds and Luxembourg’s investment fund industry, one of the largest in the world.
Lars reports from one of the world’s most advanced financial regions — from Stockholm’s Nasdaq Nordic and Sweden’s major banks to Estonia’s digital banking pioneers and the Baltics’ rapidly growing capital markets.
Marco covers the financial markets of Southern Europe — from Italy’s government bond market and Spanish banking sector to Portugal’s growing fintech scene and Greece’s ongoing economic recovery story.
Anna follows the fast-developing financial markets of CEE — from Warsaw’s GPW stock exchange and Prague’s banking sector to Budapest’s unorthodox monetary policy and Bucharest’s emerging capital markets.
Felix covers the financial powerhouse of Europe — Deutsche Bank and the Frankfurt exchange, the Swiss private banking tradition, Austria’s role as a gateway to Eastern European capital, and the ECB’s influence on German monetary policy.
James reports on the UK and Irish financial sectors — tracking how the City of London and Dublin’s IFSC are adapting post-Brexit, and how both remain deeply connected to European capital flows, regulation, and investment.
For press releases, financial data, story tips, or partnership enquiries, reach us at press@eufinance.news