Category: CEELM PR

  • Dealer’s Choice Conference

    Representatives of more than sixty law firms from across Central and Eastern Europe and from as far away as the United States, United Kingdom, and China came together in Prague on June 6, 2018, for the first ever Dealer’s Choice international law firm conference and CEE Deal of the Year Awards Banquet.

    The Dealer’s Choice event, which began on the morning of the 6th in the Congress Center of the Czech National Bank, consisted in a series of panel discussions on topics of importance to the legal profession. The day concluded with the Awards Banquet in the Empire Room of Prague’s Slovansky Dum. The two June 6 events, in combination, represented an unprecedented celebration of CEE lawyering and an opportunity for the best lawyers working in Central and Eastern Europe to exchange ideas and contact details in a vibrant and entertaining setting.

    Technically Speaking

    The first panel of the day, entitled “Terrific Not Terminator: Adapting and Adopting New Technology,” and moderated by Tereza Simanovska, Head of Legal & Compliance at APS Holding, considered the affects of recent developments in technology on the practice of law in CEE and explored the ways advances in artificial intelligence, robotics, and document review/discovery technology are reshaping the profession. 

    “Sometimes I ask myself if we need offices anymore,” said Damir Topic, Partner at Divjak, Topic & Bahtijarevic in Zagreb. “Lawyers can work remotely and take conference calls from almost anywhere now and clients are also more and more reluctant to travel.” This change is a positive one, Topic suggested, and instead of representing a potential threat to the profession should instead be seen as “rather a commodity, a way to save time and be more efficient.” 

    Rastko Petakovic, Managing Partner at Karanovic & Nikolic, reported that his firm had decided several years ago to “go phoneless” – eliminating the phones on each lawyer’s desk in favor of Skype for Business with landline capability. “I believe that we have to embrace new technologies,” Petakovic said. “I also believe that artificial intelligence will always be managed and supported by humans, so we need to train people to be open and innovative, and spare time from the usual bureaucratic things. We often forget that most of what we do can be narrowed down to three things: content, process, and relationships. The last one is the driver of our work with our clients, and this cannot be replaced with AI,” he said. 

    “But is saving time good for us?”, Avellum Managing Partner Mykola Stetsenko asked, returning to Topic’s earlier comment. “Can we profit from it in a time of fixed fees?” 

    “Absolutely,” came the reply from Clifford Chance Prague Managing Partner Alex Cook, who added that “clients actually expect us to be on top of technology. If the client wants to save time, we have to be prepared. Legal services are not diminishing; they are increasing and becoming more complex, so saving time is definitely good in my view.”

    Turning the discussion in a slightly different direction, Tereza Simanovska asked what new skill-sets partners and HR departments are looking for when hiring new lawyers. 

    “Personally, I would like to hire more software developers at our firm,” answered Petakovic. “Not just because we need to understand and embrace technology, but also because we need more algorithmic thinking.” 

    Stetsenko disagreed. “I don’t understand why law firms need to hire a lot of IT professionals,” he said. “We are law firms, not IT giants. Indeed, we can have a few IT professionals to handle automation and management of AI. However, I do not believe that AI can replace human nature, which is a basic element for our work. Negotiations and business consulting are things requiring human experience and personal judgment – something that computers cannot replace.”

    The second panel of the day was titled “The Friendship Zone: Establishing and Strengthening the International Firm-Domestic Firm Referral Relationship” and involved a thorough consideration of the ways international and domestic law firms can initiate and strengthen referral relationships. The panel was moderated by Shawn Atkinson, Partner at Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe in London.

    Atkinson started the conversation by asking the panelists how they approach local firms, and what strategies they use in choosing them. “For us, it’s really a mixture,” said Slaughter and May Partner Jonathan Marks. “Sometimes the client says which firm they want to work with. On other occasions the client wants us to choose. We also have ‘country partners’ who are responsible for being in touch with the best firms in the region for particular jobs, and we have an international team that keeps track of national law firms and helps us choose. We will want to get quotes from more than one firm where that is feasible and will generally be expected to get all the local law advice we need, within a budget agreed upon with the client.” Marks added that the fee charged to the client would generally be based on local rather than London rates, as Slaughter and May wouldn’t look to do more than pass through the amount it pays.

    Christian Blatchford, Partner at Kocian Solc Balastik in the Czech Republic, provided a local perspective. “Firms disappear and new ones appear and performance can vary over the years. We try to keep abreast of changes and maintain a close and a two-sided relationship with firms: ideally both giving and receiving work.” 

    On the use and usefulness of road-shows, a strategy that law firms often use to build new relationships with prospective clients – both referral partners and in-house counsel –  Kavcic, Bracun & Partners Managing Partner said: “We do not do a lot of those. I think there are various other ways to bring people on board, like by getting recognition from clients and peers, for example.”

    Schoenherr Sofia Managing Partner Alexandra Doytchinova nodded in agreement, noting that receiving guests from the same firm every six weeks can get boring, although she conceded that avoiding multiple contacts can be difficult for lawyers from a firm which, like hers, has over 15 offices in CEE alone. “We work very independently from our own headquarters, and we have our own contacts at referral firms – and we really try not to knock twice on the same door,” she said. “It is a bit difficult, but we try not to become annoying, so we just keep a close relationship among our firms.”

    Christian Blatchford, from one-office Kocian Solc Balastik, suggested that annual road-show cycles strike the right balance, so his firm usually strives to limit such efforts to one city per year.

    “Road-shows can be useful, and we all do them ourselves so there is an element of reciprocity,” concluded Slaughter and May’s Jonathan Marks, “but what we truly appreciate is working together, including good responsiveness and top quality work when we get in touch.”

    Politics: The Nitty Gritty

    After an extended networking lunch, the Dealer’s Choice conference’s third panel – Moving Right Along: How Recent CEE Political Trends and Developments are Likely to Affect Investment and Law Firm Business – considered the state of Central & Eastern Europe twenty years after the end of Communism. Moderator Martin Magal, the Managing Partner at Allen & Overy in Slovakia, led a conversation about how lawyers can provide valuable counsel in times of economic and political upheaval, how recent changes have affected partners’ practices and relationships with clients, and the significance of recent developments on actual and potential investments in their region. 

    Magal started the conversation with a brief historical overview, referring particularly to the events of the Prague Spring of 1968. “50 years ago in front of this building we still had Russian tanks,” he noted.“The very fact that today people from all around the world can discuss these topics freely is an important step.” But Magal didn’t deny the problems of the present. “Still,” he said, “Western democracies have fragile structures, and not so far away from here, political and economical crises are taking place.” He cited his own country as an example. “Let’s also not forget that in Slovakia a few months ago an investigative journalist was murdered, and the country is still shaken by the following uprisings and protests.” He then asked the panelistswhat the proper role of legal experts is in this context, and how lawyers can they use their expertise to influence the politics of their countries. 

    Freshfields Partner Sebastian Lawson suggested that Magal’s question was difficult to answer. Lawson noted that there are many different narratives within the EU, and the division between the North and the South, the East and the West is getting deeper and deeper. “Nationalist, illiberal parties are emerging everywhere,” he said. “For example, if Hungary and Poland will continue with their current policies, they may lose funding from the EU. With less funding, we will probably see more private financings on infrastructure projects,” he said, adding that this would definitely affect the work of lawyers. 

    Muhsin Keskin, Partner at the Esin Attorney Partnership and Baker McKenzie in Istanbul, suggested that the prevailing narrative in his country, at least, may not be the same as it is outside. “If I had to define Turkey’s economy at the time in the global context, I would say it is resilient. We have had some turbulence in the past five or six years, but we still have many transactions. Turkey is a resilient country, always able to adapt to any situation.”

    In response to a question about Brexit, Denise Hamer noted that while many investors are pulling back from the UK market, Continental Europe remains strong. “Central and South East Europe is benefiting from UK political uncertainty on one hand and domestic political will on the other hand. Slovenia is developing as a cryptocurrency center, Croatia has just implemented an investor-friendly tax regime, and Estonia has introduced a residency and stipend program for individuals working in FinTech.”

    Moving the conversation to the role of lawyers in the current economic and political climate, Ron Given said that in his view lawyers’ “traditional role in bringing structure to confusion and making some sense of the complex applies to helping clients translate things political as well.” But Given also noted that the political divisions requiring expert guidance do not stop outside the law firm door.”It’s natural that the same divisions that exist in the greater societies are also found among our colleagues, and we must take care that these divisions do not have a materially negative effect on the running of our business.”

    The question of whether lawyers should take a politically active stance in the face of political controversy sparked animated discussion. In response to the suggestion made by a member of the audience that the oath lawyers took to protect the rule of law requires them to oppose potentially unlawful acts, several panelists insisted that the role of lawyers is guide, not lightning rod. “This is a very hard question, and I believe every firm must decide individually,” concluded Martin Magal. “For example, when [Slovakians] were dealing with the murder of journalist Jan Kuciak and his fiancee, half of our office attended the protest. The firm itself did not organize anything – everyone made an individual decision.”

    Look East, Young Man!

    The conference concluded with a special session on Chinese investment in Central and Eastern Europe. The “Coming Over the Wall: Chinese Investors and Firms in CEE”panel, moderated by Judith Gliniecki, General Counsel at CEE Equity Partners, considered the forms and targets of Chinese investments in CEE, and the motives, methods, and maneuvers of both investors and law firm advisors in identifying and exploiting opportunities in the region. The panel focused on how Chinese investors perceive European opportunities and counterparts and what the cultural differences are for law firms seeking to work with Chinese clients. 

    “In the last couple of years we indeed saw a good amount of Chinese investment in Bulgaria,” Milan Pandev, Partner at Djingov, Gouginski, Kyutchukov & Velichkov in Sofia, said. “They are mostly interested in renewable energy, solar projects, infrastructure, and car manufacturing businesses.”

    Chinese lawyer Rita Ran Pang, who works within the Kinstellar Prague business development team, explained that the wave of Chinese investment that hit Europe recently is properly considered in terms of cost and opportunity. “The cost of investments is still quite low in CEE, and the region also has favorable employment law,” she explained. “Chinese companies tend to go big, so these are rentable conditions for them.” She gave several examples: “In the past four years, four billion US dollars were invested from Chinese companies into international football clubs. In Serbia, even though the country is not in the EU, there are around 20 Chinese companies doing infrastructure projects, with the intention to spread out to the Czech Republic and Croatia.” The size of these investments, Pang said, makes them controversial, leading many local officials toview them with concern.

    Linjun (Lawrence) Guo, Senior Partner at the Zhonglun W&D Law firm in Beijing, added that his firm is helping clients specifically targeting CEE countries as a means to gain a foothold into the West. “If a client wants to enter a Western country which is expensive and hard to penetrate, we consider a CEE country as a stepping stone for the larger project,” he explained. 

    When Judith Gliniecki asked how CEE countries engage with Chinese investors, Pang employed a metaphor. “They are like girlfriend and boyfriend: sometimes they love each other, but sometimes they hate each other. The hate part evidently is based on conspiracy theories, while the love part is driven by mutual financial and security issues.” Pang added that both parties should learn from each other – a process which is already well underway. 

    Guo agreed that “learning is very important,” but he suggested the concept is not only an external one for Chinese clients. “30 years ago the legal profession did not exist in mainland China, so companies still need to learn to appreciate the work of lawyers, and understand how legal processes unfold.”

    Turning to the cultural differences that may influence the course of negotiations, Pandev suggested that parties invest time and energy in studying each other’s mentality in order to get a project done. “I have to say we learned some valuable lessons in the past about Chinese investors. We learned not to underestimate them: if they look slow, it is because they are analyzing everything carefully. We also have to pay attention to every verbal formulation, because they never want to communicate negative news, they like to finish a meeting on a positive note, so you kind of have to fish it out for yourself what their position really is.”

    “They are indeed reluctant to say ‘no,’” Rita Ran Pang agreed. “Face-to-face meetings are also very important, for Chinese people have difficulty in trusting people. If during a personal meeting you can reassure the trust, it will considerably speed up legal processes.”

    Feedback and Perspectives

    Gathering for final coffees after the event, before going to their hotels to freshen up for the evening’s awards banquet festivities, attendees at the Dealer’s Choice conference spoke enthusiastically about the day’s proceedings.

    Alexandra Doytchinova, Managing Partner at Schoenherr Bulgaria, described the full-day event as extremely valuable. “It is always interesting to hear the views of other firms, working in other markets,” she said. “I believe it was really nice that during the panels people talked quite frankly about their experiences, so you could feel that it was really a sharing of thoughts and information, which is much appreciated, because this is how you can get up-to-date and measure if you are on the right way, and if you have the right understanding of things.” 

    In addition, Doytchinova said, the Dealer’s Choice event brought together friendly competitors and a good collection of regional practitioners. “The event is fantastically organized, and the number of topics is exactly right. There should not be more in number, or people would get distracted. The panels were interesting, and people were really participating.”

    Pavel Hristov, Managing Partner at Bulgaria’s Hristov & Partners law firm, highlighted the benefits of the event from another side. “I personally liked this event because it fills a void for CEE lawyers, who so far have not had a platform – a venue where, besides exchanging business cards, they can also exchange valuable ideas and initiatives.” 

    Hristov also suggested that next year he would be interested in learning more about how Brexit and other major developments in the global economy are changing conditions in CEE’s legal markets. “Will English law continue as parties’ preferred governing law for transactions, or will we change to other foreign laws?,” he wondered.“I think these are important questions.”

    Renata Petkova, Partner and Leader of Deloitte Legal’s practice in Bulgaria, suggested that she would be interested in a session considering the increasing role of the Big4 in the legal market, as they increase their ability to compete with international and major local law firms. 

    Kocian Solc Balastik’s Partner Christian Blatchford said that he appreciated the opportunity to meet other members of the extendedCEELM family, including people about whom he had so far only read about in the CEE Legal Matters magazine. “We see the deals, the partner moves and so on, and it is good to put faces to the names. I would not say that I heard many new things during the panels, but there are certain things which you need to hear repeatedly in order for the message to sink in. For example, we all have to think about legal tech, but we can tend to forget about its importance day to day. The conference has therefore succeeded in raising awareness about important issues.”

    Finally, the participants slowly dispersed in small groups or pairs, immersed in talks with old and new friends, and considering the many subjects discussed during the day.

    This Article was originally published in Issue 5.7 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.

     

  • Deal of the Year Awards Banquet

    After a valuable and information-rich day of panel discussions on important business development and law firm management topics, participants reconvened that evening (and were joined by several dozen newcomers) at the first ever CEE Legal Matters Annual Banquet and Deal of the Year Awards Ceremony – a celebration of CEE’s legal markets and the lawyers who work within them. Awards were presented for 17 qualifying markets in CEE – plus a surprise award for overall CEE Deal of the Year – with many of the lawyers playing key roles in nominated deals joining the celebration.

    The festivities began quickly in Slovansky Dum’s Empire Hall, with good food, drinks, and a live jazz band setting the mood. Eventually, announcements of the various nominees and ultimate winners were made by various close friends of CEE Legal Matters called to the stage by Editors David Stuckey and Radu Cotarcea, often generating laughter as presenters from one linguistic culture struggled with the names of firms from another. 

    “Although there are many award ceremony events, there are none with the Central European focus of the Dealer’s Choice conference and Deal of the Year Awards,” said Ronald Given, Co-Managing Partner of Wolf Theiss Warsaw office, who added that the date of next year’s event is already circled on his calendar. “Bringing together practitioners that really work this distinct market creates an atmosphere of engagement, collegiality, and genuine networking. And when you come away with an award from there, you know you have earned a significant nod of acknowledgement from your peers.” 

    ”We were as delighted with the banquet as winners were with their awards,” said David Stuckey, Executive Editor at CEE Legal Matters. “It was a great success, and we were pleased to have so many high quality law firms represented, from so many countries. That reflects the value the best law firms in CEE place on these awards, and is a profound demonstration of their significance to the region.” He smiled, adding: “The evening went by in a blur – so many people, so much laughter, good music, good food, and a great venue. We’re already excited about next year’s event!”

    Winner: Austria

    Merger of Raiffeisen Zentralbank Oesterreich AG with Raiffeisen Bank International AG

    • Raiffeisen Bank International AG (Schoenherr)
    • Raiffeisen Zentralbank Oesterreich AG (bpv Huegel)

    Summary: Schoenherr advised Austrian Raiffeisen Bank International AG on its merger with unlisted Raiffeisen Zentralbank Oesterreich AG, which was advised by bpv Huegel. As a result of the deal, Raiffeisen Landesbanken (the former majority shareholders of RZB) will hold 58.8% of RBI and the rest will be free float.

    Schoenherr’s comment: “The merger of RZB into listed RBI represents the largest corporate reorganization in the Austrian financial sector to date (over EUR 4 billion) and was one of the ten largest deals in Europe in the first half 2017. The merger improved the banks’ own funds position and simplified the group’s governance structure.”

    Robert Kaukal, Head of Legal Services Corporate, Raiffeisen Bank International: “From an internal perspective, the merger between RZB and RBI was an important milestone in the group’s history; it helped improve our group’s capital position, entailing a clearer definition of relationships with our main shareholders and streamlining organizational structures. On its face it was only a transaction between group companies; but it was reported to be among the largest corporate reorganizations in Austria, involving the merger of two banks, with one of them being a listed company – certainly not an everyday transaction. 

    Although it was a transaction among group companies, rules of fairness and at-arm’s-length principles clearly had to apply. Usually we try to live up to the tradition of involving external counsel only if needed; here we were working with a team of 3-4 lawyers in-house, but at the same time went so far as to engage separate outside counsel for both RZB and RBI to make differences of opinion transparent and firm up internal assessments. And in all fairness, ‘family affairs’ can sometimes be more heated than a battle between strangers. But as the final transaction is perceived, it appears we managed it well.

    Secondly, in a regulated industry the coordination of notifications to regulators across CEE was a piece of art in its own right – in particular when apparently harmonized EU laws are not construed consistently.”

    Final Selection Committee Member: “A milestone corporate reorganization transaction in terms of volume, complexity, and market recognition.”

    Winner: Bulgaria

    Hugo Pfohe Sale of Moto-Pfohe Group to Sumitomo Corporation

    • Seller: Hugo Pfohe GmbH (CMS)
    • Buyer/Winning Bidder: Sumitomo Corporation (Wolf Theiss)

    Summary: CMS advised Hugo Pfohe GmbH on the legal aspects of a competitive tender to sell Bulgaria’s Moto-Pfohe Group, with Wolf Theiss advising the winning bidder, the Sumitomo Corporation. The deal is reported to be the largest ever in the automotive sector in Bulgaria.

    CMS Comment: “This was the largest deal in the automotive sector in Bulgaria to date, and substantial for the market as a whole… The Seller was committed to bringing the best possible strategic investor for the business. Therefore, it organized a very competitive and transparent tender, which resulted in the participation of European and world leaders in the sector, awarding the winning bid to Sumitomo Corporation, one of the largest integrated trading and investment groups, with a 400 year history, USD 69 billion in assets, and around 800 group companies.”

    Final Selection Committee Member: “The cross-border element, the complexity and the automotive sector (a departure from the classic real estate deals in Bulgaria) make [this deal] my choice for deal of the year in Bulgaria.”

    Winner: Croatia

    Arriva Acquisition of Majority Stake in the Autotrans Group

    • Buyer: Arriva (Divjak Topic Bahtijarevic; BDK Advokati)
    • Seller/Target: Autotrans Group (Mamic Peric Reberski Rimac)

    Summary: Divjak, Topic & Bahtijarevic advised Arriva on its acquisition of 78.34% of the Autotrans Group, making Arriva the largest private bus operator in Croatia. Mamic Peric Reberski Rimac advised the sellers on the deal, which gives Arriva a 25-30% market share.

    Divjak, Topic & Bahtijarevic Comment: “The deal is especially interesting due to its complexity; we believe it to be one of the most interesting deals on the Croatian market in the last year. Arriva operates in 14 countries across Europe, employing around 60,000 people and delivering more than 2.2 billion passenger journeys every year. In 2016 Arriva had revenues of more than EUR 5 billion and it invested EUR 359 million in its operations throughout the continent.” 

    Piers Burgess, Head of Group Legal, Arriva: “It was an exciting deal, very professionally run on both the sell side and the buy side, and it enabled Arriva to significantly grow our business coverage in Croatia.”

    Final Selection Committee Member: “A ground-breaking deal for the transport business in Croatia.”

    Winner: Czech Republic

    Agrofert Transfer of Shares to AB Private Trust

    • Owners of the shares: Agrofert and SynBiol (Kocian Solc Balastik)

    Summary: Kocian Solc Balastik advised on the transfer of 100% of shares in Agrofert, a.s. and SynBiol, a.s. to two private trusts (AB private trust I and AB private trust II) to secure Agrofert’s compliance with the Conflicts of Interest Act binding on public officials.

    Kocian Solc Balastik Comment: “Trusts did not exist in Czech law before 2014. It was therefore a unique challenge to create a structure which implemented legal theory in practice with no precedent to follow. This was moreover one of the largest asset transfers on the Czech market, and therefore, subject to considerable media attention.”

    Final Selection Committee Member: “Having the guts to try new structures untested on the market should be rewarded, specifically when the law firm manages to still give the client the comfort that the aim will be legally and reliably achieved and while the transaction is in the focus of public attention.”

    Winner: Estonia

    Providence Equity Partners’ Acquisition of Baltic Subsidiaries of Modern Times Group 

    • Seller: Modern Times Group (Cobalt; Hamilton; Fort Legal; Skopina & Azanda)
    • Buyer: Providence Equity Partners (Sorainen; Mannheimer Swartling)

    Summary: Sorainen and global counsel Mannheimer Swartling advised Providence Equity Partners on the acquisition of the Baltic businesses of Swedish media holdings Modern Times Group. Cobalt, Sweden’s Hamilton law firm, Fort Legal, and Skopina & Azanda advised the Modern Times Group on the deal. The total disclosed value of the acquisition in all three Baltic States is EUR 115 million – equivalent to 12 times FY 2016 EBIT. 

    Cobalt Comment: “The transaction was the largest acquisition in the Baltics in 2017. The sale reflected MTG’s ongoing transformation from a traditional national broadcaster into a global digital entertainer, capitalizing on rapid changes in consumers’ media consumption habits. MTG will use the proceeds from the sale to transform the company further.”

    Final Selection Committee Comment: “The demands of an international PE buyer in the TMT sector are never straightforward, especially in a country like Estonia which is in the vanguard of the digital revolution.”

    Winner: Greece

    Attica Bank NPL Securitization

    • Seller: Attica Bank (Zepos & Yannopoulos; Shearman & Sterling)

    Summary: Zepos & Yannopoulos and Shearman Sterling advised Attica Bank SA, a Greek medium sized bank, on the securitization of non-performing loans and future receivables from the EUR 1.3 billion sale of real estate and on the sale of the portfolio to a Luxembourg SPV.

    Zepos & Yannopoulos Comment: “The transaction is the first NPL securitization in Greece that closed after the passing, in late 2015, of a law introducing (among other things) new rules for the sale of banking receivables. It is also the first disposal of a large non-performing loan portfolio by a Greek bank. It came after a long period of market discussions on how to best tackle non-performing portfolios and a series of legislative measures aiming to attract investors and create a secondary market for NPLs. The transaction is expected to step up the creation of an efficient, long awaited, secondary market for non-performing loans in the Greek market which holds a total of EUR 103 billion of non-performing exposures (according to the latest Bank of Greece data). It allows for efficient trenching of portfolios and gives investors’ confidence for the robustness of the validity and enforceability of the deal. The legal technology used for this transaction offers a seamless legal structure for future deals.”

    Final Selection Committee Member: “First of its kind must always be appreciated.”

    Winner: Hungary

    Waberer’s IPO

    Citigroup and Berenberg as Joint Global Coordinators, Citigroup, Berenberg, Erste Group, and Renaissance Capital as Joint Bookrunners, Erste Group as Mandated Lead Arrangers (Kinstellar; Shearman & Sterling )

    • Issuer: Waberer’s International
    • Selling Shareholders: Mid Europa Partners (Lakatos, Koves & Partners; White & Case)

    Summary: Lakatos, Koves and Partners and White & Case advised Mid Europa Partners on the IPO of Waberer’s International Nyrt., one of Europe’s largest haulage and logistics companies. Shearman & Sterling and Kinstellar represented the Mandated Lead Arrangers.  

    Kinstellar Comment: “Waberer’s IPO is Hungary’s biggest public listing in more than a decade. This landmark transaction represents a major milestone for the Waberer’s strategic growth and may give a shot in the arm to the Hungarian market currently dominated by four blue-chip stocks.”

    Timea Toth, Chief Legal and Compliance Officer at Waberer’s Group: Waberer’s IPO was Hungary’s biggest public listing in more than a decade. The proceeds of the IPO allowed Waberer’s to complete the acquisition of LINK in Poland.”

    Winner: Latvia

    AS Augstsprieguma Tikls Acquisition of Stake in Conexus Baltic Grid from Uniper

    • Buyer: AS Augstsprieguma Tikls (TGS Baltic)
    • Seller: Uniper Ruhrgas International (Ellex Klavins)

    Summary: Ellex Klavins and EY Latvia advised Uniper Ruhrgas International GmbH on the sale of its stake in AS Conexus Baltic Grid, Latvia’s unified natural gas transmission system operator and natural gas storage system operator. The buyer, AS Augstsprieguma Tikls, was advised by TGS Baltic.

    Ellex Klavins Comment: “The transaction will be consequential to the remaking of the energy market in CEE. Twenty years after Latvia privatized the national gas company, the State is executing a strategy to re-take control of the gas transmission and storage infrastructure in Latvia, as the State views this to be of strategic importance for regional energy security. The State’s aim is the establishment of a regional gas market in the Baltic States and Finland by 2020.”

    Winner: Lithuania

    UAB Euroapotheca Acquisition of Apoteksgruppen from Sweden

    • Buyer: UAB Euroapotheca (TGS Baltic; Hammarskiold & Co)
    • Seller: The Kingdom of Sweden and Private Entrepreneurs (Lindahl; Cederquist)

    Summary: TGS Baltic and Sweden’s Hammarskiold & Co law firm advised UAB Euroapotheca, a Baltic and CEE pharmacy retail and wholesale group, on its purchase of Swedish pharmacy chain Apoteksgruppen from the Kingdom of Sweden and over 100 private entrepreneurs. The sellers were advised by the Lindahl and Cederquist law firms. The value of the transaction was over EUR 171 million.

    TGS Baltic Comment: “This is the biggest ever Lithuanian investment into the Swedish market and considerably expands business relations not only between Lithuania and Sweden, but also between CEE and the North European regions, forming one of the leading pharmacy chains in the Northern and Eastern Europe. After closing, Euroapotheca will have over 600 pharmacies, the turnover of which will amount to EUR 750 million.”

    Oksana Kostogriz, Head of Legal & HR, Board Member, UAB Euroapotheca: “The acquisition of Apoteksgruppen in Sweden was a major transaction for Euroapotheca. After the acquisition the consolidated revenue of the group almost doubled (from EUR 360 to EUR 700 million). The biggest challenges were the timing and the complexity of the deal. The entire process, from the distribution of the info memo to the signing of the SPA took two months. In fact there were two separate processes: one in which the Kingdom of Sweden sold the franchise organization, and another in which more than 100 owners of pharmacies sold their companies operating one or few pharmacies. Consequently, there were two VDRs, two biddings, two SPA negotiations, and so on. In some ways the complexity of the deal even helped with its execution; having a tight timeframe, the enormous scope of the due diligence, and the complexity of negotiations kept all the team focused on the key topics, avoid distractions, and keep minor issues minor (meaning, we did not spend time on addressing them during the M&A process, and they are now being dealt with successfully).

    We really appreciate the work of our external advisors, who demonstrated extraordinary capabilities. Our conclusion: a good team is key in such a transaction. For those two months our team worked like a clock mechanism to bring us success in acquiring Apoteksgruppen.”

    Final Selection Committee Member: “As the biggest-ever Lithuanian investment into the Swedish market this deal has been very complex, involving state-owned and over 100 different private individual sellers in a two-staged process.”

    Winner: Poland

    Mid-Europa Sale of Zabka Polska to CVC Capital

    • Seller: Mid Europa Partners (CMS; White & Case)
    • Buyer: CVC Capital Partners (Greenberg Traurig; Orrick)

    Summary: White & Case and CMS advised Mid Europa Partners on the sale of Zabka Polska to funds advised by CVC Capital Partners. Orrick and Greenberg Traurig advised CVC Capital on the deal, which is the largest ever transaction in the Polish food retail sector and the largest ever private equity exit in Poland.

    CMS Comment: “This deal represents the largest transaction in the food retail sector in Poland, which is at the same time the largest exit of a private equity fund from an investment project in our country. The sale followed fierce competition among private-equity players keen to get into the Polish market, reaffirming Poland’s dominance in CEE and attractiveness to international investors.”

    Final Selection Committee Member: “Probably the blockbuster deal of the year for the region as a whole and one which every law firm would like to have worked on!”

    Winner: Romania

    A&D Pharma Acquisition by Dr. MAX/Penta Investments

    • Seller: A&D Pharma (RTPR Allen & Overy)
    • Buyer: Dr. Max (Musat & Asociatii; Baker Mckenzie; Havel, Holasek & Partners; Tsvetkova Bebov Komarevski; Clerides, Anastassiou, Neophytou; Jan Evan Law Office)

    Summary: RTPR Allen & Overy advised the shareholders of A&D Pharma on the sale of the entire group to the Dr. Max pharmacy network, owned by Penta Investments. Romania’s Musat & Asociatii coordinated the firms across multiple jurisdictions providing legal advice to the buyers.

    RTPR Allen & Overy Comment: “A&D Pharma group is the largest pharma group in Romania, operating wholesale, retail and marketing & sales services for pharmaceutical products and it also has significant operations in CEE. This transaction was considered the largest M&A transaction in the pharmaceutical industry in Romania in 2017.” 

    Mihaela Scarlatescu, Head of Legal & Compliance, A&D Pharma: “Taking into consideration just this short presentation of A&D Pharma, I feel compelled to highlight the complexity of the due diligence process, which created a huge volume of work for all involved parties – both on the buyer and seller side – both in structuring the DD process and also in collecting and presenting the documentation for legal evaluation.

    Also, the complexity resided in negotiations between parties, which were professionally sustained by the law firms assisting both parties. Strictly from the legal point of view, in such a complex transaction, besides M&A legal experience, a strong legal knowledge over all types of activities involved in the pharmaceutical industry was required in order to ensure a successful transaction. The same complexity existed during the process of notification of the merger to the Competition Authorities of Romania, Bulgaria, Poland, and the Czech Republic, especially due to the high number of relevant retail markets and the special regulations applicable in such mergers of pharmacies.

    The dynamism of the deal is a consequence of this complexity, related to the duration between the moment when the negotiations started (in May 2017) and when the agreement was signed (in November 2017). The deal was closed on April 19, 2018. 

    I strongly believe that such a short period for finalization of the deal can only be achieved as the result of the highly professional teams involved in the process – both Penta’s and A&D Pharma’s, together with all their consultants. 

    Final Selection Committee Member: “A&D has the size and deal importance that makes it a contender for me. The fact that a number of jurisdictions were directed out of Romania seals the deal in my view.”

    Winner: Russia

    FESCO Restructuring

    • Client: Far Eastern Shipping Company (Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton; Ogier; Loyens & Loeff;  Chrysses Demetriades & Co)
    • Financer: VTB Bank PJSC (Herbert Smith Freehills; Ad hoc group of bondholders; Dechert LLP)

    Summary: Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, Ogier,  Loyens & Loeff, and Chrysses Demetriades & Co, advised the Far-Eastern Shipping Company PLC and its subsidiaries on a new scheme of arrangement sanctioned by the High Court of Justice of England and Wales via an order dated November 3, 2017. Herbert Smith Freehills advised VTB Bank PJSC and Dechert advised the ad hoc group of bondholders.

    Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton Comment: “FESCO is one of the largest public transportation and logistics businesses in Russia, with operations and assets in multiple jurisdictions. Pre-restructuring, the group was highly leveraged, having listed debt, a number of bilateral facility agreements, securities financing agreements and finance leases. We undertook a detailed analysis of the group’s financing arrangements; the insolvency and security enforcement risks; and a conflicts of laws analysis which was particularly complex given that several entities within the group have strategic importance and are subject to separate legal requirements.”

    Final Selection Committee Member: “Restructurings tend to be very involved deals (fees billed typically dwarf other transactions) and so, given that this is one of the largest transport companies in Russia, that would make it a very complex deal.”

    Winner: Serbia

    EBRD and IFC Financing of Vetroelektrane Balkana – Cibuk 1 Windfarm

    • Lender: EBRD & IFC (Karanovic & Nikolic; Norton Rose Fulbright)
    • Borrower: Vetroelektrane Balkana (Maric i Mujezinovic law office in cooperation with Kinstellar; Shearman & Sterling)

    Summary: The Maric i Mujezinovic law office in cooperation with Kinstellar and Shearman & Sterling advised Vetroelektrane Balkana on the EUR 215 million financing provided by the EBRD and the IFC for the largest wind farm project in Serbia. Karanovic  & Nikolic and Norton Rose Fulbright advised the EBRD and IFC.

    Karanovic & Nikolic Comment: “With an installed capacity of 158 MW, Cibuk 1 will be the largest windfarm in the Western Balkans. The wind farm is expected to provide electricity to 113 thousand households and reduce carbon emissions by more than 370,000 tones. The project should give a critical contribution to Serbia meeting its commitment to have 27% of its gross energy consumption coming from renewable energy sources by 2020. The project is the largest project financing in renewable energy sector in Serbia to date, and it was led by two international financing institutions.”

    Marie-Anne Birken, EBRD General Counsel: “This project was challenging, as it involved trying to create effective security under Serbian law, which had not previously been attempted. Notably, the wind farm was divided up into a number of plots under various forms of ownership, easements, and rights, creating difficulties in creating a unified security over the project assets and land acceptable to the lenders.”

    Zeljko Duric, Director, Vetroelektrane Balkana: “Bringing a project of the magnitude of the development of the Cibuk 1 wind farm to a successful financing stage is a feat that involved a large team of legal, insurance, financial, environmental, and other professionals, across a number of jurisdictions, all working with dedication and creativity on the deal, around the clock. As the largest wind farm in the Western Balkans region, and consequently the most complex in terms of the required infrastructure and deal structuring, we believe the project also positively contributed to the knowledge-building in the mentioned expert areas as well as within the state authorities with whom the project company, Vetroelektrane Balkana, closely cooperated. We hope that the footprint left by the project will allow new investors to tread this path more easily.”

    Winner: Slovakia

    EPH Group Acquisition of Slovenske Elektrarne from Enel

    • Seller: Enel Group (Allen & Overy)
    • Buyer: EPH Group (White & Case)

    Summary: White & Case advised Energeticky a Prumyslovy Holding (EPH), a leading Central European energy group, in connection with its two-stage acquisition of 66% of the shares of Slovenske Elektrarne, a member of the Enel Group, and the issues related to the joint venture between EPH and ENEL in the period prior to EPH’s acquisition of the second tranche of shares. Allen & Overy advised the Enel Group on the initial stage of the deal, with a second international firm (which asked to remain anonymous) taking over for the second stage.

    Final Selection Committee Member: “Always challenging to bridge the gap between a strategic seller and a PE buyer – especially given the regulated sector and political backdrop.”

    Winner: Slovenia

    Sale of Adria Mobil to Trigano in the Course of Ownership Restructuring by Shareholders of Protej d.o.o.

    • Buyer: Trigano (CMS)
    • Sellers: 36 Private Shareholders of Protej d.o.o. (Kavcic, Bracun in partnerji)

    Summary: CMS advised Trigano on its purchase of Adria Mobil, the Slovenia-based caravan and motor home manufacturer. Kavcic, Bracun in partnerji represented a subset of the selling shareholders.

    Final Selection Committee Comment: “Adria Mobil is clearly ‘the deal’ in this group.

    Winner: Turkey

    Vitol Acquisition of Petrol Ofisi from OMV

    • Buyer: Vitol Investment Partnership Limited (Kolcuoglu Demirkan Kocakli; Hengeler Mueller)
    • Seller: OMV AG (Cerha Hempel Spiegelfeld Hlawati; Balcioglu Selcuk Akman Keki Attorney Partnership)

    Summary: CHSH and the Balcioglu Selcuk Akman Keki Attorney Partnership advised OMV on the EUR 1.368 million sale of 100% of its shares in Turkish mineral oil distribution company OMV Petrol Ofisi AS to Vitol Group. Kolcuoglu Demirkan Kocakli and Hengeler Mueller advised Vital on the deal.

    Kolcuoglu Demirkan Kocakli Comment: “The deal is the largest transaction in the Turkish market in the last five years and the most significant leveraged buyout transaction in the Turkish M&A market, with a total value of USD 1.45 billion and with a bank financing amounting to USD 700 million. After signing, a diplomatic crisis between Turkey and the Netherlands caused high pressure and serious concerns regarding the closing, from a regulatory perspective. KDK had to create alternative legal scenarios several times, all creating complexity in pre-closing corporate work.”

    Andreas Aigner, Head of M&A Legal, OMV Aktiengesellschaft: “The divestment of the Turkish retailer Petrol Ofisi to Vitol for EUR 1.368 billion is a prime example of the successful transformation of OMV in line with its corporate strategy. We created and maintained strong competitive pressure throughout the entire auction process and were able to swiftly deliver the transaction in a challenging market environment. The success of the transaction is the result of a very dedicated and passionate project team involving all relevant disciplines.”

    Final Selection Committee Member: “All three of these [nominees] are tremendous. I start with the OMV deal because the complexity and political drama certainly must have strained counsel.

    Winner: Ukraine

    Ukraine Eurobond Issue

    • Issuer: State of Ukraine/ the Ministry of Finance of Ukraine (Avellum; White & Case)
    • Joint Lead Managers: BNP Paribas, Goldman Sachs, and J.P. Morgan Securities plc (Latham & Watkins; Sayenko Kharenko)

    Summary: Avellum and White & Case advised the Ministry of Finance of Ukraine on its USD 3 billion, 15-year, 7.375% Eurobond issue, which was combined with a cash tender offer to the holders of the outstanding Eurobonds due 2019 and 2020. Sayenko Kharenko and Latham & Watkins advised joint lead managers BNP Paribas, Goldman Sachs, and J.P. Morgan Securities on the transaction, which is the first stand-alone sovereign bond issue by Ukraine since its 2015 sovereign debt restructuring. 

    Avellum Comment: “The transaction is the first Ukraine’s sovereign Eurobond issue combined with a tender offer. The tender offer element required certain changes to applicable Ukrainian tax legislation. In addition, existing legal uncertainties relating to liability management exercises in respect of Ukrainian sovereign eurobonds called for innovative solutions in terms of overall transaction structuring and documentation.”

    Final Selection Committee Comment: “The complexity, size and importance for the national economy make Ukraine Eurobond Issuance my choice for deal of the year in Ukraine.”

    This Article was originally published in Issue 5.7 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.

     

  • Keeping It Cool: August Issue is Here!

    Keeping It Cool: August Issue is Here!

    We have to apologize. The hot days of the European summer just got hotter, with the sizzling August 2018 issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine heating up the CEE Legal Matters website and burning its way through the presses and mail on its way to their desks.

    I’m afraid we had no choice. Fortunately, our Subscribers are, by definition, super-cool, so they should be able to access and read the issue (in its electronic format here) without special gloves. As for the rest of you … I’m afraid even the gloves won’t be enough. You’ll have to wait for it to cool down sometime in late October. 

    As subscribers will discover, the issue contains:

    • Guest Editorial by Alexandra Doytchinova of Schoenherr Bulgaria
    • Across the Wire: The Summary of Deals in CEE
    • The Buzz Across CEE 
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region 
    • Special Article: Tackling Turkey’s Credit Gap with Gender Bonds
    • The Corner Office: Mentors
    • Inside Insight with Ondrej Plesmid, Chief Legal Officer at King’s Casino, and Vera Kolesnik, Legal Director at Nestle
    • Special Article: Acting in Alliance: A Look at Act Legal’s Growing Footprint
    • Market Spotlights on Russia
    • Guest Editorial by Polina Lyadnova of Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
    • Special Article: A Blessing and a Curse: Sanctions a Mixed Bag for Foreign and Domestic Firms in Russia
    • Expat on the Market: Interview with Thomas Mundry of Noerr
    • Market Snapshots
    • Inside Out: Uralkali’s 2018 Financing
    • Experts Review: Banking & Finance

    The publication of the August 2018 issue of the magazine means that the June 2018 issue has been moved from behind the paywall and is freely available to everyone (available here in e-reader format and here in pdf). As subscribers already know, the contents of that issue include:

    • Guest Editorial by Pawel Szaja of Shearman & Sterling
    • Featured Deals
    • The Summary of Deals 
    • The Buzz Across CEE 
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region 
    • Freshfields IML in CEE: A Profile of Sebastian Lawson
    • Take the Stage: Legal Tech Fallacies and the Structural Transformation of the Legal Profession
    • Inside Insight with Miljan Malovic of Banca Intesa
    • Article: CEE Real Estate Landscape – The Market at a Glance
    • Market Spotlights on the Czech Republic and Slovakia
    • Guest Editorials by Katarina Mihalikova of Majernik & Mihalikova and Ladislav Storek of Dentons
    • The Transforming Legal Market: A Scarcity of Skilled Slovak Associates
    • Expat on the Market: Interview with Rita Pan Pang of Kinstellar
    • Market Snapshots
    • Serving the Start-Ups: A Czech and Slovak Round Table
    • Inside Out: CNIC Corporation’s Acquisition of Prologis Park Galanta-Gan in Slovakia and Czech Media Invest’s Acquisition of CEE Radio Businesses from Lagardere
    • Experts Review: Real Estate

    If you would like to demonstrate your own coolness by signing up for a subscription to the CEE Legal Matters magazine yourself, you may do so here.

  • Newsflash: Special CEELM Issue on Special Events is Special!

    Newsflash: Special CEELM Issue on Special Events is Special!

    The special July issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine focused on the three major CEELM events this past June in Prague — the Fourth Annual General Counsel Summit, the first annual Dealer’s Choice conference, and the 2017 CEE Deal of the Year Awards Banquet — is here!

    The special issue contains a special report on the proceedings, dozens of photos from the three successful events, and comments from participants, in addition to regular features The Buzz, On the Move, and the Table of Deals and Moves. Subscribers to the CEE Legal Matters magazine can access the electronic version here, and enjoy their summer content in the knowledge that a hard copy will be on its way to them shortly. 

    Although non-subscribers will miss out on the fun for another two months, to ease their pain, we have moved the May 2018 issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine out from behind the paywall, making it accessible to subscribers and non-subscribers alike in electronic format here and pdf format here. As subscribers already know, highlights from that issue include:

    • Guest Editorial by Rastko Petakovic of Karanovic Nikolic
    • The Summary of Deals 
    • The Buzz Across CEE 
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region 
    • Change at the Top: Erika Papp Takes Over as Managing Partner at CMS Hungary
    • Featured Deals: Gauging the GDPR in the Czech Republic
    • Marketing Law Firm Marketing: Marketing-Savvy Partners
    • Market Spotlight on Hungary
    • Guest Editorial by Laszlo Szecsenyi, Managing Partner, Szecsenyi & Partners
    • Inside Out: CMS and Dentons Advise on Credit Facility for MOL
    • Market Snapshots
    • Expat on the Market: Interview with Christopher Noblet of Hogan Lovells
    • Inside Insight with Director Legal Affairs of Zagreb International Airport
    • Experts Review: Data Protection

    If you would like signing up for a subscription, you may do so here.

  • The June 2018 issue of the CEE Legal Matters is ready to go!

    The June 2018 issue of the CEE Legal Matters is ready to go!

    Subscribers to CEE Legal Matters — a rare and special breed, far superior to most human beings in their heightened awareness and recognition of the important things in life — are already uniquely empowered to access the issue in its electronic format here, and they will be receiving hard copies in the mail soon.

    As they will soon discover, the issue contains:

    • Guest Editorial by Pawel Szaja of Shearman & Sterling
    • Featured Deals
    • The Summary of Deals 
    • The Buzz Across CEE 
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region 
    • Freshfields IML in CEE: A Profile of Sebastian Lawson
    • Take the Stage: Legal Tech Fallacies and the Structural Transformation of the Legal Profession
    • Inside Insight with Miljan Malovic of Banca Intesa
    • Article: CEE Real Estate Landscape – The Market at a Glance
    • Market Spotlights on the Czech Republic and Slovakia
    • Guest Editorials by Katarina Mihalikova of Majernik & Mihalikova and Ladislav Storek of Dentons
    • The Transforming Legal Market: A Scarcity of Skilled Slovak Associates
    • Expat on the Market: Interview with Rita Pan Pang of Kinstellar
    • Market Snapshots
    • Serving the Start-Ups: A Czech and Slovak Round Table
    • Inside Out: CNIC Corporation’s Acquisition of Prologis Park Galanta-Gan in Slovakia and Czech Media Invest’s Acquisition of CEE Radio Businesses from Lagardere
    • Experts Review: Real Estate

    The publication of the June 2018 issue means that the April 2018 issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine — the 2018 Corporate Counsel Handbook (.pdf version here) — has been moved from behind the paywall and is freely available to everyone. As subscribers already know, this year’s Handbook includes the results of the 2018 survey of over 4000 General Counsel and Heads of Legal in Central and Eastern Europe and the shortlists for the CEE Legal Matters Dealer’s Choice Deal of the Year Awards, complete with commentary from General Counsel and other company representatives about the significance of those deals and the challenges they encountered in making them happen.

    If you would like to demonstrate your own heightened awareness and recognition of the important things in life by signing up for a subscription yourself, you may do so here.

  • Last Chance for Dealer’s Choice and Banquet and GC Summit

    The Dealer’s Choice conference and Deal of the Year Awards Banquet on June 6 and the annual General Counsel Summit on June 7-8  are less than a week away. If you haven’t yet made arrangements to join these celebrations of lawyering — the largest events for business lawyers in the history of CEE, it’s not too late. Prague awaits.

    And we’re waiting too. The halls have been booked. Caterers found. Live music scheduled. Speakers arranged. Sessions planned. Tuxedos rented. Panels prepared. Awards made. Brochures printed. Champagne fizzed. Jokes practiced. Badges created. We’re ready, and waiting on tenterhooks for attendees to come and for the fun to begin.

    For those of you who already have bought your tickets: See you in Prague!

  • May Issue Out Now!

    May Issue Out Now!

    At CEE Legal Matters, we live to serve! Thus, in the middle of putting together the two largest, most important, and, darn it, coolest events for lawyers in the history of CEE, we have also put together the remarkable May, 2018 issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine, which is out and available for subscribers now. You’re impressed, admit it. 

    Subscribers can access the issue in its electronic format here, and they will be receiving hard copies in the mail soon. As they will soon discover, the issue contains:

    • Guest Editorial by Rastko Petakovic of Karanovic Nikolic
    • The Summary of Deals 
    • The Buzz Across CEE 
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region 
    • Change at the Top: Erika Papp Takes Over as Managing Partner at CMS Hungary
    • Featured Deals
    • Gauging the GDPR in the Czech Republic
    • Marketing Law Firm Marketing: Marketing-Savvy Partners
    • Market Spotlight on Hungary
    • Guest Editorial by Laszlo Szecsenyi, Managing Partner, Szecsenyi & Partners
    • Inside Out: CMS and Dentons Advise on Credit Facility for MOL
    • Market Snapshots
    • Expat on the Market: Interview with Christopher Noblet of Hogan Lovells
    • Inside Insight with Director Legal Affairs of Zagreb International Airport
    • Experts Review: Data Protection

    The publication of the May 2018 issue means that the March 2018 issue is now available to everyone as well (in electronic format here, or pdf format here). As subscribers already know, highlights from that issue include:

    • Guest Editorial by Martin Magal, Partner at Allen & Overy Bratislava
    • The Summary of Deals 
    • The Buzz Across CEE 
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region
    • Now or Never: The Looming GDPR Deadline
    • The Corner Office: Your Favorite Class
    • Market Spotlight on Austria
    • Guest Editorial by Axel Anderl, Partner at Dorda
    • Smiles from the Middle of Europe: Good Times in Austria
    • The In-House Perspective: Austrian General Counsel Share Thoughts on the Outlook for Business
    • Expat on the Market: Interview with Tim Pfister, Managing Partner at Knoetzl
    • Experts Review: Infrastructure/PPP

  • Time is Running Out for Tickets to Premier Business Lawyer Conferences in CEE

    Time is Running Out for Tickets to Premier Business Lawyer Conferences in CEE

    Time is running out to register for the Dealer’s Choice event and the GC Summit — the two premier conferences for business lawyers in CEE — both scheduled for the City of 100 Spires.

    The Dealer’s Choice conference and Deal of the Year Awards Banquet, schedule for June 6 in Prague, will be the largest gathering of law firms in the history of Central and Eastern Europe. This year’s event — the first of what will inevitably become the one “can’t-miss” event on CEE lawyers’ calendars — will feature four expert panel discussions on subjects of critical importance to law firm management and improved client service. In addition, with firms from the United Kingdom, Russia, China, and of course from across CEE attending, the event will provide unparalleled networking opportunities, with the evening’s banquet serving as a raucous celebration of CEE lawyering. Tickets can be purchased via the event website.

    This year’s GC Summit — the fourth, following successful Summits in Budapest (2015), Istanbul (2016), and Warsaw (2017) — is scheduled for June 7-8 in Prague. It will be attended by several hundred senior in-house counsel from across CEE for two days of best practices review, strategy exchange, and professional networking/socializing. In-house counsel wishing to attend the premier annual gathering of corporate counsel in Central and Eastern Europe may purchase tickets via the event website. A quick reminder: Only those partners from law firms that are sponsoring the event will be able to attend.

    Attractive and valuable sponsorship opportunities for both events are still available. But the clock is ticking, and time is running out. Contact CEE Legal Matters or visit the event websites soon to register for these major events. We want to see you in Prague! 

     

  • The 2018 Corporate Counsel Handbook is Now Published!

    The 2018 Corporate Counsel Handbook is Now Published!

    Putting aside our natural modesty, temporarily, with an awareness that an announcement like this deserves to be made with some fanfare: Let the trumpets blare and the drums roll! The April 2018 issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine — the annual Corporate Counsel Handbook — is out and available now! 

    Subscribers can access the magazine in electronic format (here) with hard copies soon to be on their way from the printer to their desks. All GCs who are not subscribers yet but took the time to participate in the survey will receive their complimentary copy within the next couple of days as well — We thank you for your time!

    This year’s Handbook includes both the results of the 2018 survey, sent out to over 4000 General Counsel and Heads of Legal in Central and Eastern Europe and the shortlists for the CEE Legal Matters Dealer’s Choice Award for Deal of the Year in 17 CEE jurisdictions, complete with commentary from GCs and other company representatives about the significance of those deals and the challenges they encountered in making them happen.

    In addition, the publication of the April 2018 issue of the magazine means that the February 2018 issue is now freely available to everyone — subscriber and non-subscriber alike — in electronic reader format here or in .pdf format here. As subscribers already know, that issue includes, among other things:

    • Guest Editorial by Sebastian Lawson of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
    • The Summary of Deals 
    • The Buzz Across CEE 
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region 
    • Featured Deals
    • Pessimism Fails to Fluster: Emerging Europe Enjoys Another Stellar Year of M&A Growth in 2017
    • A Decade After Independence: Hope, Disappointment, and Potential in Kosovo
    • Market Spotlight on the Balkans
    • Guest Editorial by Vladimir Radonjic, Managing Partner, Radonjic/Associates
    • Reveling in the Spotlight: A Serbian Round Table
    • Market Snapshots
    • Expat on the Market: Interview with Patricia Gannon, Partner at Karanovic & Nikolic
    • Inside Insight with General Counsel of JAT Tehnik
    • Experts Review: Energy

    If you are not already a subscriber and would like to register to access the magazine you can do so here

  • Open Call For GCs: Last Week For the GC Survey and GC Summit Early Bird

    Open Call For GCs: Last Week For the GC Survey and GC Summit Early Bird

    To all in-house counsel who do not want to miss out on receiving a complimentary copy of the 2018 Corporate Counsel Best Practices report or attend the 4th Annual CEE General Counsel Summit, this is your week to act!

    The 4th Annual CEE General Counsel Summit will take place in Prague on June 7-8, 2018. Registration is now open and we’ve set up a 50% early bird discount code, valid until May 1, 2018, for in-house counsel who’d like to take part in the conference: GC_Early_50. To use it simply, click on the “Enter Promotional Code” option at the top of the registration page and copy the code in — the registration price for both individual and group passes should update automatically. More information about the event, sponsored by Slaughter and May as a Chairman Sponsor, can be found here.

    Furthermore, we’ve launched an open call to participate in the 2018 GC Survey. In-house counsel who participate in the 10 minute survey will receive a free copy of the 2018 Corporate Counsel Best Practices report as soon as it is published and will receive a full fee waiver code for the GC Summit. Past editions of can be found here and here

    If you have any questions related to either of these two projects, please do not hesitate to contact our Managing Editor, Radu Cotarcea