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  • SORAINEN Advises Nordea on ERGO Pension Funds Takeover

    SORAINEN Advises Nordea on ERGO Pension Funds Takeover

    SORAINEN Estonia has advised Nordea Pensions Estonia on taking over the management of all pension funds currently managed by ERGO Funds.

    The transfer brought Nordea pension funds 27,000 new investors and increased the volume of assets under management by EUR 65 million. As at 1 September, the total volume of Nordea pension funds exceeded EUR 179 million, and in comparison to the same period last year the number of customers has close to doubled. On 1 October 2014, Nordea will merge the former ERGO funds with Nordea pension funds with the same law firm advising the latter on the pension fund merger.

    SORAINEN claims that this is “one of the most complex cases in the Estonian investment fund industry.” It is the first pension fund management transfer as an asset deal and the first pension fund merger in Estonia, as well as one of the very few investment fund mergers.

    The firm team advising on the deal included Partner Reimo Hammerberg, Senior Associate Paul Künnap, and Associate Helen Ratso.

    In August, the same firm has advised Nordea on the transfer of its Baltic banking business — operated by Nordea Bank Finland in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania — to its Swedish parent company Nordea Bank (reported on by CEE Legal Matters on August 18, 2014). 

     

  • Greenberg Traurig Represents BNP Paribas in Acquisition of Bank Gospodarki Zywnosciowej

    Greenberg Traurig Represents BNP Paribas in Acquisition of Bank Gospodarki Zywnosciowej

    Greenberg Traurig advised BNP Paribas in the acquisition of control of Bank Gospodarki Zywnosciowej (BGZ).

    BNP Paribas will finalize the acquisition of 74.39% of shares of Bank Gospodarki Zywnosciowej on September 23rd, as Rabobank — the owner of BGZ — subscribed yesterday to the tender offer, which valued BGZ at PLN 4.5 billion (approximately EUR 1.1 billion).

    Following completion of the tender offer, BNP Paribas should hold between 88.64% and 90% of BGZ while Rabobank will retain a stake just below 10%. This acquisition was completed after obtaining all required regulatory approvals, including that of the Polish Financial Supervision Authority.

    The Greenberg Traurig team was led by Warsaw-based Senior Partner Lejb Fogelman, who was supported by Partners Lukasz Pawlak, Stephen Horvath, and Paul Westhoff, as well as by Associates Adam Cain, Agata Jakubczak, Ma?gorzata Pasnik and Mateusz Slizewski.

     

  • Gleiss Lutz Advises on TRW/ZF Merger

    Gleiss Lutz Advises on TRW/ZF Merger

    Gleiss Lutz has advised US listed TRW Automotive Holdings Corp. (TRW) on its sell of outstanding shares to Germany based ZF Friedrichshafen AG (‘ZF’).

    The all-cash transaction is, according to the law firm, valued at approximately USD 13.5 billion. After closing, TRW is to become a business division of ZF. The transaction will create a global automotive group in the supplier business with pro forma combined sales of approximately EUR 30 billion and 138,000 employees. The closing of the transaction is subject to certain conditions such as approval by the TRW stockholders, the receipt of the regulatory approvals and further customary closing conditions. The transaction is expected to close in the first half of 2015.

    In CEE, TRW operates in Czech Republic, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Turkey.

    The team advising TRW was led by Partners Christian Cascante and Jochen Tyrolt, together with Partners Wolfgang Bosch, Thomas Winzer, Gerhard Roder, Johann Wagner, and Stephan Wilske. Also working on the deal were Christian von Kockritz, Adrian Bingel, Johannes Schragle, Nico Holtkamp, Lucie von Haller, and Markus Martin.

     

    Gleiss Lutz advised together with a team from Simpson Thacher, New York.

     

  • White & Case Advises on Prologis CEE Portfolio Aqcuisition

    White & Case Advises on Prologis CEE Portfolio Aqcuisition

    White & Case has advised industrial real estate company Prologis on the acquisition of an international property portfolio.

    According to the law firm, Prologis has acquired three logistics parks located in the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Poland. The parks, encompassing 23 Class-A distribution centers totaling 230,000 sqm of leasable space, are located along key regional transport routes.

    Petr Panek, one of the Partners that led the team working on the deals, stated: “These strategically-located properties complement Prologis’ existing strong portfolio in the CEE region. Our ability to bring together a strong team of lawyers from across the CEE region, who worked seamlessly across jurisdictions, enabled us to contribute to the smooth execution of this transaction.”

    In a Prologis press-release, Philip Dunne, President of Prologis Europe commented: “We are pleased to acquire such well-located logistics facilities at a discount to replacement costs. These high-quality assets complement our existing portfolio. The Prague assets, in particular, are in a long-established park that will benefit from an increase in labor availability in the years to come.”

    The White & Case team was led by Partners Panek in Prague and Marek Staron in Bratislava, supported by local Partner Maciej Zalewski in Warsaw, Counsel Ladislav Chundela in Prague, Tax Consultant Tomas Cibula in Bratislava, and Associates Karel Petrzela, Jan Stejskal, Kamila Dankova, Marianna Galusova in Prague, and Katarzyna Czwartosz, Kamila Przepiesc and Anna Struzynska in Warsaw).

    In July, the same company purchased Prologis Park Budapest-Ullo, the 37,500 square meter Auchan-occupied building in Budapest, Hungary (reported on by CEE Legal Matters on August 1, 2014).

     

  • Dentons Confirms New Prague Partners

    Following our article from yesterday announcing Jiri Tomola’s move from White & Case, Dentons confirmed two partners have in fact joined the firm from the same office. 

       

    Ladislav Smejkal and Jiri Tomola

    The second Partner is Ladislav Smejkal. Tomola and Smejkal will join Dentons in Prague together with a team of four: Senior Associate Tomas Osicka, Associate Beata Sabolova who were previously at Svehlik & Mikulas advokati, Associate Martin Fronek, from the Prague office of White & Case, and Associate Andrea Hamorska from Hogan Lovells (which exited the Czech market in May this year). The additions to the firm brings the total number of lawyers in the Dentons Prague office, who now claims to have the third largest team in the country, to 41.

    Tomola advised mainly financial institutions on various types of financings including acquisition finance, structured finance, project finance transactions, insolvencies and financial restructurings and related litigations. Smejkal has particular expertise in criminal law with an emphasis on white collar crime, injured party defence, corporate criminal liability, litigation, and labor law. At White & Case where he was the head of the Employment practice, coordinating  employment and labor law advice across the CEE region. 

    Europe CEO, Tomasz Dabrowski commented: “The team’s arrival marks yet another step in our strategic goal to be a top leading pan-European practice and in our continuing commitment to the Central Eastern European region. Their expertise reflects our focus on the financial services sector and we are confident that they will help us build on our existing offering in the Czech Republic and beyond.”

    Prague Office Managing Partner, Ladislav Storek added: “We are delighted to be joined by Jiri and Ladislav and the team of associates. The new team further supports our goal of further strengthening our practice and confirming our position as one of the very top players in the Czech Republic and the broader region.” 

  • CMS Adds New Of Counsel in Warsaw

    CMS Adds New Of Counsel in Warsaw

    CMS has announced that Banking & Finance lawyer Tomasz Zwolinski has joined the firm as Of Counsel, and will head the office’s Project Finance practice, which operates within the Banking department. 

       

    Tomasz Zwolinski

    Zwolinski has 10 years’ experience in the Banking and Finance sector. Before joining CMS he worked at ING Bank Slaski, and more recently he worked for Allen & Overy, where he was involved in a number of projects related to financing export transactions and acquisitions. He has also participated in a number of infrastructure and property projects, and has advised on financing projects for the construction of motorways in Poland and Ukraine, financing the construction of hotels and office buildings in Poland, and also various industrial, service and residential projects and facilities in the Russian Federation. In the field of debt-leveraged and acquisition transactions he advised a private equity fund on leveraging the re-capitalization of a company held by that fund, and also a consortium of lenders in financing a tender offer at the Warsaw Stock Exchange.

    Malgorzata Chrusciak, the CMS Partner managing the Banking and International Finance Department in Warsaw, said that: “I’m glad Tomasz has joined our team and will help strengthen the transaction practice, in particular in the scope of project finance, financing of acquisitions and financing of export transactions in which he has specialised for many years. I’m convinced that our clients will appreciate his knowledge and experience.”

     

     

  • In Person: A Rude Awakening

    In Person: A Rude Awakening

    CEE Legal Matters has asked a number of Serbian lawyers to describe the local situation following the strike initiated by the Belgrade Bar Association. This is one of the accounts we received from Viktor Prlja. We want to thank Viktor for taking the time to write this exclusive account explaining the reasons behind the strike for our readers. 

       

    Viktor Prjla, Lawyer at Prlja-Zilovic Law firm

    On Wednesday, September 13, 2014, the Serbian Bar Association passed a resolution to join the Bar Association of Belgrade on a general strike. Lawyers will not attend any court hearings or sessions or submit any written briefs. All lawyers will withdraw from the High Council of Courts  and the High Council of  Prosecutors (The Attorney General’s Office). The resolution also calls for the withdrawal of all lawyers from committees working on EU membership and committees working on drafts of laws. Last, but not least the resolution calls for the resignation of The Minister of Justice, Nikola Selakovic.

    The strike goes into effect on Wednesday, September 17, and will continue until all demands are met. Minister Selakovic has called for the strike to be postponed and for talks to begin. The strike follows the failure of a previous round of negotiations which collapsed due to the resignation of Lazar Krstic as the Minister of Finance and unresponsiveness from the government about the demands of the Bar. The demands have expanded significantly since then.

    What are the demands?

    Return to the flat tax rate from 2013, and a 10% decrease

    Lawyers currently pay a flat rate tax, calculated by the Tax administration. The latest change moved lawyers from taxing category 4 to category 5 for entrepreneurs.

    On face value it seems like a very favorable solution for lawyers. Regardless of the revenue, you pay the same taxes. For large firms this is not a problem but for many smaller firms there is no steady stream of revenue that can guarantee to cover a flat tax. Furthermore, the tax rate is used to calculate dues for lawyers for mandatory health and social security. These can amount to a significant cost and lawyers cannot opt out of these dues.

    With the number of lawyers rising, partly due to a large influx of judges into the legal profession, there is a problem finding business. This is exacerbated by the ban on advertising for lawyers imposed by Bar associations. 

    Interestingly enough, lawyers owe quite a lot in back taxes. On the website of the Serbian tax authority there is a list of top 1000 entrepreneurs and small businesses  owing the highest amount in taxes. The list includes 156 lawyers whose overall back taxes amount to EUR 2 million Euros (RSD 200 million). The number one lawyer that owes tax is ranked 44th with about EUR 950,000 in back taxes as of June 2014.  

    The Belgrade Bar Association argues that half of the names on the list are no longer listed as practicing lawyers.  Many of them are not registered with the Bar anymore, or are retired, or have died. The majority of them did not have lucrative careers as lawyers or law firms, and often did not pay Bar membership dues. The majority of debt consists of unpaid social security dues. This means that a great deal of back taxes can be collected by confiscating two thirds of the debtor’s pension. About 4/5 of those claims (social security) have reached the statute of limitations anyway.  

    On the other hand, the state owes many lawyers back fees for mandatory representation in criminal cases. The total amount owned in such back fees are in the vicinity of EUR 10 million. This is linked with an ongoing grievance of Belgrade lawyers that police connections dictate who gets mandatory representation cases and who gets paid on time. There are calls for consolidating these debts.

    As the Country is slowly implementing a program of austerity with large-scale lay-offs at the center of government policy there doesn’t seem to be an argument for higher taxes, especially as lawyers, like all businesses, are feeling the crunch of the recession.

    Amendments to be made to the Notary Public law

    As of September 1, 2014, Serbia instated a network of notary publics. Not an unheard-of policy, as Serbia had notary publics until the end of Second World War. The solution is advertised as a way to strengthen the rule of law and facilitate faster legal transactions. There are however some serious issues with the notary public system as it is implemented.

    First, it is unconstitutional. The jurisdiction of notary publics is vast. They have been given exclusive rights to not just notarize contracts but to draft (and charge) all contracts pertaining to the transfer of real estate. This includes drafting Wills and Testaments, as well as all mortis causa contracts. They also conduct inheritance proceedings, border disputes, and no-fault divorce proceedings. This is in violation of article 67 of the Constitution of the Republic of Serbia which grants sole jurisdiction of legal proceedings to Courts.  Furthermore, several of the laws that direct the work of notary publics were enacted on August 31 and implemented the next day. This is a violation of the legislative process as all laws become enforceable only after 8 days of being published in the Legal Gazette.

    This vast authority of notary publics is a serious challenge to many lawyers’ livelihoods, which cannot be circumvented.  There is a hefty price tag to the services of notary publics as they are higher than lawyer’s fees, and much higher than regular Court taxes for notarization (a 7200% increase in some cases). Not only does this sideline Courts and law firms, but is also a heavy burden on the budget of citizens. But this isn’t where it ends.

    There are now 94 notary publics. They are supposed to take on the workload of many circuit courts and of some 8000 lawyers. While more notary publics are expected to join the Chamber of Public Notaries, at this point the Chamber is 6 notary publics short of the legally- required number. Some public notaries have made appointments for March of 2015, raising considerable doubt that they will deliver the expedience that was promised with the change.

    A major issue is that more than half of practicing notary publics  passed their exams under reformed conditions that are not in accordance with the law. Many were accepted or rejected in a 2 minute-long interview by a new, expanded commission This has sparked the suspicion that political considerations played a large role in the review of many of the candidates. This has the hallmarks of large scale corruption. By infiltrating party loyalists among the notary publics, significant funds can be extracted for party purposes. Funds that cannot be traced. This is speculation of course, but such mechanisms have been used in Serbia in the past.

    One of the solutions proposed by the Bar Association of Serbia is the so-called “German solution” where lawyers would be given similar authority to notary publics.

    The resignation of the Minister of Justice, Nikola Selakovic

    The resignation demand is one most likely to be used as a bargaining chip. There is however, quite a lot of resentment among the legal community towards Minister Selakovic, primarily due to the Law of Notary Publics and the lack of reforms in the judiciary system. 

    There is a growing fear among lawyers that there is a media boycott against the legal profession. There is very little in the media about the strike or any detailed analysis of the issues. On the other hand the media campaign behind the notary public program has been touted as a flagship policy of the regime,with local media being flooded by news stories revolving around them and expressing optimism for the program.

     The notary public implementation program is made with the support and partnership ofGIZ (deutsche gesellschaft fur internationalezusammenarbeit), the German partnership program, and the European Union. The reform is touted as an important step in EU membership process, which makes it that much harder to argue against it. Croatia, Bosnia, and Montenegro have all instituted notary publics in the years since their independence.

    The fear among lawyers is that the new tax rates and the notary public system is an organized move against the legal profession. Fears that there is, and continue to be, widespread corruption within the system are not far behind.

    (The thoughts, opinions, and assertions contained in this account are solely those of the author, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of CEE Legal Matters).

  • Partner Joins CHSH from Noerr in Prague

    Pavel Siroky joined CHSH Kalis & Partners, the Prague office of Austrian firm CHSH Cerha Hempel Spiegelfeld Hlawati, as a Partner. 

       

    Pavel Siroky (Linkedin)

    Prior to joining CHSH, Siroky was the head of real estate of the Prague office of Noerr, where he worked since 2008. Before that, he worked for 2 years for Wolf Theiss, preceded by less than a year with Balcar Polansky Eversheds. During the last year of his legal studies at Charles University Prague, he worked as a paralegal for Salans (now Dentons).

    Petr Kalis, head of the Prague office, commented: “We are very pleased, that Pavel joins our company. His arrival represents another significant strengthening of our team, especially of team focusing on international transactions. Pavel has great reputation among German speaking clientele”  

     

  • Dentons Adds Partner from W&C in Prague

    Dentons has confirmed the addition of Banking/Finance Partner Jiri Tomola in the firm’s Prague office. 

       

    Jiri Tomola

    Tomola joins from White & Case, where he spent the past ten and a half years, first as an associate, then as a Local Partner in August 2009, then as a full Partner in January 2013. Before joining White & Case in January, 2003, Tomola had worked for three years in-house in the Ceska sporitelna bank.

    This is yet another senior addition to Dentons in the region, following Adam Mycyk, who joined the Ukrainian office of the firm from Chadbourne & Parke, and Perry Zizzi, who joined the firm in its Bucharest office from Clifford Chance. Dentons also recently hired Richard Singer as its new COO for Europe, also from White & Case’s Prague office. Aside from Singer and now Tomola, the Prague office of White & Case also lost Partner Ivo Barta this August, who left the firm to join Jakub Dostal and Petr Kuhn (both former Partners of the firm), in the launch of BODAKH law firm.

     

     

  • Debevoise & Plimpton Advises on First Phase of Aeroflot Privatization

    Debevoise & Plimpton Advises on First Phase of Aeroflot Privatization

    Interfax has announced that Debevoise & Plimpton was selected to offer legal advice in support of the first phase of the road map for the privatization of Aeroflot. 

    According to the CIS Information Services Group, Aeroflot announced their pick out of five bids that were submitted in total. The other four bidders were White & Case, Clifford Chance, Latham & Watkins, and Allen & Overy. 

    For the first half of the year, the Russian airline reported an unconsolidated revenue increase for JSC Aeroflot only of 14.8% from RUB 92,014 million in the first half of 2013. 

    Debevoise has declined to comment.