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Firm

M&A
Succession issues, carve-out opportunities and regulatory reforms are creating a deal environment mutually beneficial for both Japanese business owners and PE firms
ESG
From antitrust crackdowns to state-level litigation, ESG practices are under siege
ESG
Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia are seeing a wave of climate-related disclosure requirements as transition planning increasingly comes to the fore
ESG
As sustainable finance matures, legal practitioners have a key role to play in shaping market practice
New hires were made across the finance and corporate practices in Hong Kong, Melbourne and the Czech Republic
M&A
While PE investors are attracted to the strong fundamentals for the sector, risks such as tariffs pose hidden challenges for transactions
Lorenzo Corte, partner and global head of transaction practices, discusses a de-SPAC deal using native treasury companies and how the firm is building momentum in this market
Carl Fernandes, global head of Linklaters’ financial regulation group, outlines the firm’s opportunities in the financial sector, particularly in Europe and the US
Sponsored

Sponsored

  • Sponsored by Elias Neocleous & Co
    Libor [London interbank offered rate] is the primary benchmark, along with Euribor, for short-term interest rates around the world. Libor rates are calculated for five currencies and seven borrowing periods, ranging from overnight to one year, and are published each business day. Libor is based on submissions provided by a selection of large international panel banks. These submissions are intended to reflect the interest rate at which banks could lend one another unsecured funds. Many financial institutions, mortgage lenders, and credit card agencies set their own rates based on this. However, in 2017, the UK's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) announced that after 2021 it would no longer require the panel banks to submit the rates needed to calculate Libor. Libor will no longer be published after the end of 2021, and market participants are urged to transition to alternative reference rates (ARRs).
  • Sponsored by Nagashima Ohno & Tsunematsu
    On July 24 2019, based on a request from the Financial Services Agency (FSA), the Trust Companies Association of Japan – a financial association whose members comprise of financial institutions engaged in trust businesses – proposed sample provisions to deal with the risk of money laundering etc. in trust agreements. The outline of these sample provisions is as follows:
  • Sponsored by Futej & Partners
    Another set of measures came into force in Slovakia on May 12 to protect business operators from the fallout caused by Covid-19. These measures implement interim bankruptcy protections for business operators. These measures are temporary and as it stands, will expire on October 1 2020, with an option for the government to extend them through December 31 2020.