Hi all, I have a quick question. If a company was acquiring another foreign company what are some of the considerations a lawyer would need to think of or instruct local counsel to do?
Tax considerations, cultural differences, different financing arrangements (i.e acquiring a foreign company which is a country that uses Islamic financing), timing in terms of different time zoneswhat have you thought of so far?
Tax considerations, cultural differences, different financing arrangements (i.e acquiring a foreign company which is a country that uses Islamic financing), timing in terms of different time zones
Thanks Frank! so I guess it’s pretty much the same points you look for when doing a domestic acquisition but then also going a step further by applying international law etc and other variablescompetition, employment, labour, corporate law (what kind of acquisition, a large plethora of details that would take a huge post to describe), financial law (borrowing restrictions etc), tax, IP, etc. Can be from a few to lots. It's a long story. Google Allen & Overy anatomy of a deal to have a snapshot. It's a video on YT; it was very helpful when I watched it for the first time
Thanks Frank! so I guess it’s pretty much the same points you look for when doing a domestic acquisition but then also going a step further by applying international law etc and other variables
Oh I see, thank you! So on your point on international private law, though like you say it might not be applicable depending on the transaction, would that usually cause for a situation where you would email the respective foreign legal counsels for local advice on that particular area of law?You're very welcome. On your point, yes and no. You would be looking at potentially the same things (though it's likely to be more in cross-border transactions, particularly outside the EU/EEA), but international law is actually excluded (based on your specific question). International public law refers to the legal obligations and relationships between sovereigns (hence in a private transaction it's useless). International private law is more about uniformisation, but don't really see this applicable per se; eg in dispute settlement yes - the codified UNCITRAL rules would be used in arbitration maybe.
I do not think soOh I see, thank you! So on your point on international private law, though like you say it might not be applicable depending on the transaction, would that usually cause for a situation where you would email the respective foreign legal counsels for local advice on that particular area of law?