Romania, ICSID, and the Laboratory of Institutional Capture
Why the Euroins case is not about insurance, but about a state sabotaging its own legitimacy
There are moments in the history of a jurisdiction when the curtain lifts, and what is revealed behind it says more than a thousand reports.
The Eurohold–Euroins v. Romania case, now before the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), does not merely expose a dispute between a corporation and a national authority. It outlines with radiological precision the administrative vulnerabilities of the state: perceived corruption, professional counter-selection, and the use of public institutions as tools of economic retaliation.
When ICSID rejected Romania’s request to halt the arbitration, it did more than declare there was legal merit. It said, indirectly, that there is enough smoke to justify checking whether there is fire.
That is devastating.
Because international arbitration does not judge only facts — it also judges the credibility of a state as a good-faith actor.
Romania enters the room without certainty that its narrative is persuasive.
It enters with a stained reputation.
Anatomy of a scandal larger than Euroins
The short version: Euroins Romania becomes the leader of the compulsory motor insurance market (RCA).
The Financial Supervisory Authority (Autoritatea de Supraveghere Financiară — ASF) intervenes and revokes the company’s license, citing a massive capital shortfall. Insolvency follows, then bankruptcy, then market panic.
That is the official version.
The complete version is more nuanced: alternative technical reports reportedly contested the basis of the measure.
On paper, ASF described imminent collapse; external analyses, including at the European level, did not confirm the same disaster.
The difference was not only one of method — it was one of intent.
When two realities collide, someone is wrong.
And people are wrong especially when they have something to hide.
ASF – referee, player, and executioner
ASF managed the insurance market like a drunken surgeon: large incisions, no diagnosis, plenty of blood.
Astra, Carpatica, City Insurance, Euroins — four episodes with the same director.
When four patients die on the same operating table, it’s not bad luck; it’s the system.
For years, suspicions circulated in the press about political influence, arrangements, and selective tolerance.
When the same institution acts brutally in one case and shrugs in another, we are no longer speaking of regulation — but of high-stakes arbitration.
The authority did not merely apply the law; it created its own law.
And what’s more dangerous than illegality is discretionary power.
Illegality can be judged.
Discretion cannot.
A toxic jurisdiction
In the forum of international arbitration, sympathies are irrelevant.
What matters is whether the state respected commitments of fair and equitable treatment, transparency, proportionality, and non-discrimination.
The fact that ICSID allowed the case to proceed communicates something simple: Romania’s position deserves investigation.
ICSID is not a tabloid.
If it moves forward, it is because it sees a state potentially failing to meet its own standards.
Investors don’t read poetry.
They read risk.
Counter-selection – the method by which an institution commits suicide
In Romania, far too often, weak individuals are placed at the top of public authorities — people who obey.
And obedience, in high doses, mutates: it becomes a dangerous pseudo-intelligence calibrated only to the political signal.
When competence becomes a threat and loyalty becomes the main criterion, the outcome is inevitable: the institution produces chaos.
Rules are applied based on interest, not law.
Decisions are made by phone call, not statute.
Weak institutions create unstable markets.
Capital flees unstable markets.
Counter-selection is systemic metastasis.
Once started, it does not stop by itself.
The state does not lose — citizens lose
The state, in a legal sense, has no wallet.
When Romania loses at ICSID, the Government does not pay; taxpayers pay.
Hospitals vanish from plans, highways remain drawings, wages stagnate.
Every euro paid in external damages generates multiple losses in the economy.
Bad institutions are the most expensive anonymous tax.
The fresh example: Trustee Capital Management IFN OÜ
If Euroins was a fire, the Trustee Capital case is the smoke showing where the next bill will land.
A financial operator licensed in Estonia, regulated under FIU Estonia (the Estonian Financial Intelligence Unit) and compliant with EU standards on non-bank financial instruments.
EU law is explicit:
Financial institutions licensed in an EU Member State may issue financial-legal instruments valid across all Member States without any additional local authorization.
In the Trustee Capital case, the service is not “provided in Romania” to the public, but is issued from Estonia and used B2B in Romania — and the legal validity of these guarantees derives directly from EU law.
Yet in practice, Romanian institutions issued restrictive administrative positions, and certain public schemes illegally excluded Trustee Capital guarantees, despite courts suspending and annulling the provisions limiting the access of European institutions.
These elements raise questions of proportionality, non-discrimination, and EU-law conformity.
The Environmental Fund Administration (Administrația Fondului pentru Mediu — AFM) — currently under scrutiny by the National Anticorruption Directorate (Direcția Națională Anticorupție — DNA) for multiple acts and facts of institutional theft and corruption — rejected Trustee guarantees based on arbitrary and unpublished opinions from the National Bank of Romania (Banca Națională a României — BNR).
Courts repeatedly found that such interpretations not only lack legal foundation but are profoundly unlawful, suspending and annulling the regulatory articles used to exclude the operator.
Although the rulings are enforceable, administrative implementation is delayed.
Here lies the familiar fracture:
The judiciary says one thing; the bureaucracy refuses to comply.
And this time, the protagonist is not ASF but BNR — with a different mask and different methods, but similar outcomes: blockage, delay, non-execution, non-compliance.
If ASF strikes with an axe, BNR quietly locks the door using an internal memo.
The result is the same: the operator is removed from the architecture, and the public pays the price.
When the situation surfaced in the press, certain local outlets promoted hostile narratives, presenting only the authorities’ position and ignoring court rulings.
Not information, but media execution.
Not verification, but labeling.
This is not an exception.
It is a pattern.
ICSID – the anatomy of abuse
Returning to ICSID: the forum does not judge only facts; it judges the credibility of the state as a contractual partner.
If Romania loses, it will not be because Euroins was an angel, but because the state will not have been perceived as a fair actor under the treaty.
In the Trustee Capital matter, the line is even clearer: the operator won in court, yet execution was refused and administratively circumvented.
And when the state loses contact with its own jurisdiction, the next stop is Brussels — and then arbitration.
Populism – the sedative of fear
When the system cracks, populism appears as cheap anesthetic.
The political crew changes, but the chassis remains bent.
The clan rotates, but the capture endures.
Populism is merely a lid on a pressure cooker.
Conclusion
The Euroins case is the symptom.
The Trustee case announces the invoice.
The real problem is not one company or another.
The real problem is that Romania operates as a temporary administration, not as a guarantor of EU rules.
ASF proved it can destroy.
BNR proved it can silently block.
Ministries showed they can transform administrative opinions into barriers.
Client media can turn anything into a useful scandal.
ICSID does not judge an operator.
ICSID judges a state.
Capital does not forgive.
It does not forget.
And it rarely returns.
Anyone may sign; the taxpayer pays the bill.
The difference is that the signature is political, and the payment is collective.