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  • As the debt saga continues, attention has turned to its ramifications for future bond offerings and restructures
  • The Government of the Republic of Kenya has ratified the Double Taxation Treaty (DTA) with Mauritius through the publication of a legal notice in the Kenya Official Gazette on May 23 2014. The DTA will become effective on January 1 2015. It was signed on May 7 2012, together with an investment promotion and protection agreement (IPPA) and ratified by the Republic of Mauritius. This is a significant event, reinforcing the economic relationship between the economic powerhouses of east Africa.
  • Erik Lind Klaus Henrik Wiese-Hansen Since early 2000, the Norwegian corporate bond market has been transformed. From a small market dominated by domestic utility enterprises, it has changed into a global market characterised by large issue volumes of high-yield (HY) corporate bonds. This makes the Oslo Stock Exchange and Nordic Alternative Bond Market, combined, the third largest market place for HY corporate bonds in the world. In the same period, there has been an increasing number of international issuers and international investors on the Norwegian HY market. In 2009, only three percent of the listed corporate bonds came from foreign issuers. Now the latest figures show that in 2013, the number has increased from three percent to almost 50% and the total kroner figure related to foreign issuers is, as of 2013, approximately NOK 99 billion ($16 billion).
  • Consumer protection has become a hot topic in Slovakia in recent years, particularly when it comes to unfair business practices used by sellers. To address this issue, the Slovak Parliament passed a new piece of legislation, the so-called Distance Selling Act, which took effect in June 2014. It will increase the level of consumer protection and legal certainty in the relationship between consumers and sellers. In this article, we would like to inform you on the most important changes the new legislation introduces. The Distance Selling Act applies to sales that are made through any form of communication over a distance or without any personal contact between the consumer and the seller. One of the most significant changes is the extension of the time period during which consumers can cancel the purchase contract, which is now 14 calendar days as opposed to the seven-day period under the old regime. In addition, the consumer now has the right to retain the goods until the seller refunds the money already paid as a deposit.
  • The country aims to pass a casino law to boost tourism opportunities ahead of the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo. Masayuki Fukuda of Nagashima Ohno & Tsunematsu explains how
  • Samuel Hong A number of recent privatisations in Malaysia have been proposed to be undertaken through selective capital reduction (SCR) exercises. The most recent example is the proposal by Khazanah Nasional, Malaysia's sovereign wealth fund, to privatise Malaysian Airline System through an SCR. Under an SCR privatisation, an existing shareholder (acquirer) of a company (target) becomes the sole shareholder of the target under the selective cancellation of shares held by all shareholders other than the acquirer.
  • The lighter side of the past month in the world of financial law
  • Jose Florante M Pamfilo The Philippines recently enacted a law that allows the full entry of foreign banks into the Philippines. Under this new law, Republic Act (RA) No 10641, foreign banks may operate in the Philippine banking system through any one of the following modes of entry: (i) by acquiring, purchasing or owning up to 100% of the voting stock of an existing bank; (ii) by investing in up to 100% of the voting stock of a new banking subsidiary incorporated under the laws of the Philippines; or (iii) by establishing branches with full banking authority. RA No 10641 amends RA No 7721, the Foreign Banks Liberalisation Act. Previously, foreign banks were limited to one of the following modes of entry: (i) acquiring, purchasing or owning up to 60% of the voting stock of an existing bank; (ii) investing in up to 60% of the voting stock of a new banking subsidiary incorporated under the laws of the Philippines; or (iii) establishing branches with full banking authority. The third mode was available only for a period of five years from the effectivity of RA No 7721 or until May 1999, during which period a maximum of 10 foreign banks could be allowed to establish branches in the Philippines. Meanwhile, the General Banking Law of 2000 expanded the first mode and allowed foreign banks to acquire up to 100% of one already existing bank, but only for a period of seven years from the effectivity of the General Banking Law or until June 2007.
  • Sponsored by Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom
    Activism and engagement have long outlived the shareholder spring of 2012. Skadden's Scott Hopkins and Lorenzo Corte explain why UK boards must prepare to become more responsive
  • Sponsored by Slaughter and May
    Limited recourse provisions don’t preclude an issuer from becoming insolvent. Slaughter and May's Sanjev Warna-Kula-Suriya and Eric Phillips analyse whether this is this a concern