Close Menu
Finance Pro
  • Home
  • Art Gallery
  • Art Investment
  • Art Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Finance
  • Investing in Art
  • Investments
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Export-Import Bank of the United States and Export Finance Australia Provide Conditional and Non-Binding Support for Potential Financing of up to US$600 Million to Advance Tronox's Rare Earth Strategy – PR Newswire
  • Guernsey Finance appoints Barnaby Molloy as CEO
  • Why AI Projects Fail In Finance—And How To Build Ones That Succeed
  • Better Cryptocurrency to Buy Right Now With $1,500: XRP (Ripple) vs. Zcash
  • TrustLinq Seeks to Solve Cryptocurrency’s Multi-Billion Dollar Usability Problem
  • Sanlam Investments launches R4bn Property Impact Fund
  • JPMorganChase Names Todd Combs to Head Strategic Investment Group of Security and Resiliency Initiative; Company Also Announces External Advisory Council to Inform SRI’s Strategy and Investment Priorities – Business Wire
  • What is a Cryptocurrency Exchange and How Does It Work?
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get In Touch
Finance ProFinance Pro
  • Home
  • Art Gallery
  • Art Investment
  • Art Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Finance
  • Investing in Art
  • Investments
Finance Pro
Home»Investments»Pope Leo XIV introduces significant reform to Holy See’s investments
Investments

Pope Leo XIV introduces significant reform to Holy See’s investments

October 15, 20255 Mins Read



Victoria Cardiel

By Victoria Cardiel

Vatican City, Oct 15, 2025 /
07:00 am

Last week, Pope Leo XIV introduced a significant reform to the financial architecture of the Holy See.

With the motu proprio Coniuncta Cura, (“Shared Responsibility”) the Holy Father revoked the exclusive right that the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR by its Italian acronym) — popularly known as the “Vatican Bank” — had until then for investment management, opening the door to the use of other foreign financial intermediaries if deemed more efficient or appropriate.

The new regulations do not seek to remove investments from the Vatican purview but rather to open the possibility of management to accredited financial intermediaries.

“If there is a sum to be invested, it was previously done only through the IOR; but now it can also be done through the APSA [Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See]. This does not mean that investments will be made outside [of the Vatican] but rather that external financial organizations can step in to assist the Vatican,” Mimmo Muolo, an expert on Holy See finances and a journalist for the Italian Bishops’ Conference’s newspaper, Avvenire, told ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner.

Pope Leo XIV — who has practical experience in financial management as superior of the Order of St. Augustine — “wanted to apply the economic principle of diversification in the Vatican,” Muolo noted.

Reactivating the Vatican’s other economic-financial lung

This decision effectively means “reactivating the Vatican’s other economic-financial lung,” he explained. The APSA, in fact, is the body responsible for managing the Vatican’s real estate assets, which total some 2,400 apartments, most of them located in Rome and Castel Gandolfo. In addition, there are another 600 units rented to businesses or used as offices.

The expert explained that, in reality, the IOR — a small financial institution with just over 100 employees — “is not a bank” but rather “a large investment fund that has made it possible to channel financial resources.”

“The true Vatican bank is APSA, the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See, which manages both the real estate assets — the Vatican apartments and palaces — and the securities, shares, and financial resources,” he pointed out.

The core of the reform, Muolo pointed out, is pragmatic: ensuring the economic sustainability of the Holy See, whose operation requires a significant staffing structure.

“You have to keep in mind,” he explained, “that between the Holy See and the Vatican City State, which are legally distinct but connected, there are about 5,000 employees.”

“Just guaranteeing the monthly salary of those 5,000 workers requires quite a large amount of resources. This amount also comes from the profits from the investments that have been made to date,” he noted.

Reorganizing to improve performance

Muolo interprets the pope’s decision as an attempt to reorganize management and is based on the “determination to maximize and improve performance.”

“Previously, there was a monopoly regime, with the IOR as the sole actor doing everything. Now, however, the stimulus will also come from the outside because instead of being carried away by inertia, new avenues, new partners, and new solutions will be sought,” he explained.

The expert believes this decision by Pope Leo will stimulate “a certain internal competition between APSA and the IOR to find the best solutions and increase revenue.”

(Story continues below)

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

The measure, which repeals the Rescriptum ex Audientia promulgated by Pope Francis in August 2022, represents a change of direction in Vatican financial policy.

The Argentine pontiff had centralized all fund and asset management in the IOR and APSA, forcing the Curia institutions to transfer their resources to accounts managed by these bodies: “We know well that the internal needs for the functioning of the Holy See have increased but resources have not. Moreover, during the COVID years, there was also a major crisis in revenues.”

“That’s why I believe Pope Leo is moving in this direction: seeking new vehicles, new financial operators who can, while always respecting the Holy See’s rules on ethical investments, increase revenues,” he added.

No scandal in reversing Pope Francis’ reform

Finally, Muolo emphasized the realistic and evolving nature of the reform, which he considers a reasonable correction of the framework established by Francis: “Not all reforms that are implemented necessarily produce the expected results,” he said.

“If a reform doesn’t work, it’s good to change it. And I think Pope Leo did not act solely out of his own personal will. He probably received reports, saw accounting records, consulted with experts in the field, and deemed it appropriate to slightly correct the course set by Pope Francis. I don’t see anything scandalous in this: It’s normal that over time, reforms are made to reforms,” ​​he noted.

This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.


Victoria Cardiel

As a journalist, Victoria Cardiel has specialized in social and religious news. Since 2013, she has covered the Vatican for various media outlets, including Europa Press and Alfa and Omega, the weekly newspaper of the Archdiocese of Madrid.





Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Sanlam Investments launches R4bn Property Impact Fund

December 8, 2025 Investments

JPMorganChase Names Todd Combs to Head Strategic Investment Group of Security and Resiliency Initiative; Company Also Announces External Advisory Council to Inform SRI’s Strategy and Investment Priorities – Business Wire

December 8, 2025 Investments

Younger Americans making riskier investments, nonessential purchases for tragic reason

December 7, 2025 Investments

6 things I’d never do as an investment expert

December 5, 2025 Investments

Major Qatari firm eyes investments in Mindanao

December 4, 2025 Investments

Later life ‘brain fog’ could cost you £30,000 – and your investments may be the reason

December 4, 2025 Investments
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Export-Import Bank of the United States and Export Finance Australia Provide Conditional and Non-Binding Support for Potential Financing of up to US$600 Million to Advance Tronox's Rare Earth Strategy – PR Newswire

December 9, 2025 Finance 1 Min Read

Export-Import Bank of the United States and Export Finance Australia Provide Conditional and Non-Binding Support…

Guernsey Finance appoints Barnaby Molloy as CEO

December 9, 2025

Why AI Projects Fail In Finance—And How To Build Ones That Succeed

December 9, 2025

Better Cryptocurrency to Buy Right Now With $1,500: XRP (Ripple) vs. Zcash

December 9, 2025
Our Picks

Export-Import Bank of the United States and Export Finance Australia Provide Conditional and Non-Binding Support for Potential Financing of up to US$600 Million to Advance Tronox's Rare Earth Strategy – PR Newswire

December 9, 2025

Guernsey Finance appoints Barnaby Molloy as CEO

December 9, 2025

Why AI Projects Fail In Finance—And How To Build Ones That Succeed

December 9, 2025

Better Cryptocurrency to Buy Right Now With $1,500: XRP (Ripple) vs. Zcash

December 9, 2025
Our Picks

7 Chinese financial associations label Pi Network cryptocurrency ‘valueless’

December 8, 2025

A Beginner’s Guide to Following Real-Time Cryptocurrency Prices in the UK

December 7, 2025

Art student Libby wins Mackenzie Thorpe design contest

December 7, 2025
Latest updates

Export-Import Bank of the United States and Export Finance Australia Provide Conditional and Non-Binding Support for Potential Financing of up to US$600 Million to Advance Tronox's Rare Earth Strategy – PR Newswire

December 9, 2025

Guernsey Finance appoints Barnaby Molloy as CEO

December 9, 2025

Why AI Projects Fail In Finance—And How To Build Ones That Succeed

December 9, 2025
Weekly Updates

Sustained and Strategic Investments Needed for US-Japan Collaboration – The Diplomat

April 5, 2024

KKR Real Estate Finance Trust Inc. to Announce First Quarter 2024 Results

April 5, 2024

Urgent call for more accessible finance options with 34% of SMEs at risk of closure

April 27, 2024
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get In Touch
© 2025 Finance Pro

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.