Category: Austria

  • DLA Piper Advises UBM on EUR 150 Million Corporate Bond

    DLA Piper Advises UBM on EUR 150 Million Corporate Bond

    DLA Piper has advised UBM Development AG on the placement of a EUR 150 million corporate bond. Raiffeisenbank International and Quirin Privatbank were the joint lead managers and bookrunners in the transaction. 

    The term of the bond is five years and was issued with a coupon of 3.25%. According to DLA Piper, “the demand for the bond was so great that an increase from the originally planned volume of EUR 120 million to EUR 150 million was made. Nevertheless, the order book had to be closed early on the day of the issue.”

    DLA Piper’s team was led by Partner Christian Temmel.

    DLA Piper did not reply to an inquiry about counsel for the banks.

  • CMS Vienna Supports NO Pressehaus in Restructuring and Founding of New Company

    CMS Vienna Supports NO Pressehaus in Restructuring and Founding of New Company

    CMS Vienna has advised Niederosterreichisches Pressehaus Druck- und Verlagsges.m.b.H., Lower Austria’s largest media corporation, on the reorganization of its corporate structures. 

    According to CMS, “aiming for a clearer structure and improved offers of both the publishing house and the printing business, a legal separation of the two divisions was realized. The printing business was transferred to a newly founded, fully-owned subsidiary, which was registered as NP Druck Ges.m.b.H.” In addition, according to CMS, “Niederosterreichische Nachrichten (NON), the most important news medium of NO Pressehaus, will still be published by Niederosterreichisches Pressehaus Druck- und Verlagsges.m.b.H. in the future. With overall 28 local editions, NON is read by 527,000 people every week, constituting a reach of 34% in Lower Austria.”

    “At the moment,” CMS reports “165 staff members generate revenues of about EUR 55 million, ranking NO Pressehaus among the leading printing companies in Austria.”

    NO Pressehaus’ new corporate structure was devised and designed by CMS Partner Sibylle Novak working with a team including Attorneys Anna Wieser and Oliver Werner and Associate Eva-Maria Vogerl, as well as Partner Johannes Hysek. The CMS team also cooperated with Richard Kohlhauser of M&A Treuhand in questions relating to company transformation tax, applicable fees, and accounting matters.

  • FWP Promotes New Junior Partner

    FWP Promotes New Junior Partner

    Fellner Wratzfeld & Partner has promoted Elisabeth Fischer-Schwarz to Junior Partner.

    Fischer-Schwarz has been an associate at fwp since 2015 and was recently admitted to the Austrian bar association. She specializes in banking & finance and dispute resolution. She earned her diploma ad Ph.D in law at the University of Vienna, and also studied abroad at the University of Cambridge and the University of Oxford. Before she became an associate at fwp, she worked as a research assistant at the Department for Civil Law at the University of Vienna.

    “Once again, it is in-house talent development that contributes to the quality of our performance,” explained Founding Partner Markus Fellner, in a statement released by the firm. Dr. Fischer-Schwarz, a long-serving associate, has proven her worth as an attorney-at-law after having successfully passed her exam and being admitted to the Austrian bar association.”

  • Dorda Advises Idera on Acquisition of Ranorex

    Dorda Advises Idera on Acquisition of Ranorex

    Dorda has served as Austrian counsel to US-based Idera, Inc., the parent company of global B2B software productivity brands, on its acquisition of Austria’s Ranorex GmbH, a software development company focusing on test automation software. Ranorex will become part of Idera, Inc.’s Test Management Tools business, thus expanding a division which has world-wide customers. The United States’ Horzepa Spiegel & Associates PC law firm was global counsel to Idera, and Pinsent Masons acted as German counsel. Ranorex was advised by Rautner Attorneys. The purchase price was not disclosed.

    “Software companies are expanding worldwide,” commented Dorda Partner Christian Ritschka, who led his firm’s team on the deal. “Idera, Inc.’s latest acquisition will contribute to the company’s world-wide customer base and innovative technologies. The parties’ strong commitment to the deal was a key element for the successful completion of this transaction.”

    The Dorda team led by Ritschka included Partner Axel Anderl, Thomas Angermair, Heinrich Kuhnert, Of Counsel Martina Znidaric, Attorneys Nino Tlapak, Bernhard Heinzl, Christoph Hilkesberger, Magdalena Brandstetter, and Philipp Bohler Grimm, and Associates Lukas Schmidt, Alexandra Ciarnau, Gunther Posch, and Florina Thenmayer.

    The Rautner team advising Ranorex was advised by Partner Uwe Rautner, supported by Associate Andreas Lengger.

  • Invalidity of an Arbitration Agreement Due to a Possible Violation of the EU Directive on Self-Employed Commercial Agents

    The Parties’ Positions

    In state court proceedings, Claimant requested indemnity pursuant to Section 24 of the Austrian Commercial Agents Act, basing the Austrian court’s jurisdiction on Section 99 of the Law on Court Jurisdiction, pursuant to which a person who does not have a forum generale in Austria may nevertheless be sued in Austrian courts if he or she has assets within the district of an Austrian court. Claimant argued that Respondent had assets in Austria as it had an outstanding claim against it.

    Respondent objected to the Austrian court’s jurisdiction, arguing that it was not competent at all and that the Parties had agreed on arbitration; and that arbitration had already been initiated by Respondent against Claimant before a tribunal in New York. This arbitral tribunal had rendered a partial award, turning the matter into res judicata. With regard to Section 99 of the Law on Court Jurisdiction, Respondent argued that the outstanding claim on which Claimant based the Austrian court’s jurisdiction had been extinguished due to Claimant’s set-off declaration in the arbitration.

    The Supreme Court’s Decision

    The lower courts rejected the claim for lack of jurisdiction. The Supreme Court overturned those decisions in March 2017 for the following reasons:

    First, the Supreme Court stated with regard to Section 99 of the Law on Court Jurisdiction that the value of assets on which jurisdiction is based has to reach at least 20% of the amount in dispute, and that an outstanding claim may be included in the calculation of assets. To determine whether the outstanding claim of Respondent against Claimant had been extinguished by means of a set-off declaration in the arbitration, the Supreme Court first clarified relevant conflict of law questions. It ruled that the procedural admissibility and the procedural effects of a set-off declaration are determined by the law applicable to the arbitral proceedings, which, pursuant to Article V (1) lit d New York Convention, primarily follows the parties’ choice. The prerequisites and the substantive effects of a set-off declaration are determined by the law applicable to the merits of the dispute. In the matter before it, the Supreme Court concluded that New York law was applicable to both of those aspects. As under New York law Respondent’s claim against Claimant could not have been extinguished by Claimant alleging claims against Respondent in the arbitration, Claimant could therefore rely on Section 99 of the Law on Court Jurisdiction.

    Second, the Supreme Court dealt with Respondent’s objections related to the Agency Agreement’s arbitration clause. Pursuant to Article II (3) of the New York Convention, a court must refer parties to arbitration if the matter is subject to an arbitration agreement unless the arbitration agreement is null and void, inoperative, or incapable of being performed. A court may fully review the validity and effectiveness of an arbitration agreement and is not limited to a prima facie review. The corresponding Austrian law provision (Section 584 (1) second sentence of the Austrian Code of Civil Procedure) orders that a claim may not be rejected if, inter alia, the court finds that the alleged arbitration agreement is ineffective. An arbitration agreement may be considered ineffective if the parties’ intention was to exclude the application of mandatory procedural or substantive provisions.

    Third, the Supreme Court referred to the European Court of Justice’s (ECJ) case law according to which apparent violations against fundamental EU law provisions constitute an ordre public violation. The ECJ in Ingmar ruled that the EU Directive on self-employed commercial agents (which is implemented by the Austrian Commercial Agents Act) is applicable irrespective of the parties’ choice of law if the underlying facts have a strong EU connection. It is generally understood that the ECJ classifies claims of a commercial agent as provisions with an internationally mandatory character. Such provisions cannot be derogated by party agreement and are applicable even if the conflict of law rules refer to some other national law. Also the German Federal Court held that the provisions on indemnity for commercial agents cannot be overruled by a party agreement in a jurisdiction served by courts which do not respect those provisions.

    Based on its findings, the Supreme Court held that Claimant had a mandatory claim for indemnity which would not be recognized due to the Parties’ agreement on arbitration and the application of substantive New York law. Thus, the Supreme Court declared the arbitration agreement ineffective and admitted Claimant’s claim before Austrian courts.

    By Filip Boras, Partner, and Alexander Zollner, Junior Associate, Baker McKenzie Austria

    This Article was originally published in Issue 4.8 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.

  • Wolf Theiss Advises Catella Residential Investment Management Acquisition of Student Apartment Building in Vienna

    Wolf Theiss Advises Catella Residential Investment Management Acquisition of Student Apartment Building in Vienna

    Wolf Theiss has assisted Catella Residential Investment Management GmbH with its acquisition of a student apartment building by way of a forward purchase from Germany’s real estate development company GBI AG.

    The property, which has 165 tailor-made, furnished, and equipped “Smartments Student” units is located south of Vienna’s new Hauptbahnhof at Helmut-Zilk-Park and will be ready for occupancy by autumn 2018. According to Wolf Theiss, “this project will be another step in strengthening Vienna’s reputation as a student-friendly city.”

    The Wolf Theiss team advising Catella throughout the transaction was led by Partner Karl Koller and included Partner Erik Steger and Niklas Schmidt, Senior Associate Eva Stadler, and Associate Elias Pressler.

    Wolf Theiss did not reply to an inquiry about counsel for GBI AG.

  • Former Baker McKenzie Austria Managing Partner Joins Firm Executive Committee and Becomes Chair of Diversity & Inclusion Committee

    Former Baker McKenzie Austria Managing Partner Joins Firm Executive Committee and Becomes Chair of Diversity & Inclusion Committee

    Baker McKenzie has announced a number of changes to its leadership teams with immediate effect, including former Germany and Austria Managing Partner Constanze UlmeEilfort’s r-becoming a member of the firm’s Executive Committee and taking over as Chair of the firm’s Diversity & Inclusion Committee from Claudio Prado.

    Constanze Ulmer-Eilfort stepped down from her Managing Partner of the firm’s German and Austria offices position earlier in the year, and on July 1, 2017 Frankfurt-based Partner Matthias Scholz took over for a term of three years, with Vienna-based Stefan Riegler taking over day-to-day responsibility for the Austria office. Scholz’s management team includes Vienna-based Partner Georg Diwok and Frankfurt-based Partners Axel Metzger and Hariolf Wenzler. 

    As part of its recent announcement regarding Ulmer-Eilfort’s becoming a member of the Executive Committee, Baker McKenzie also announced that London-based Partner David Allen would be taking over from Michael Fieweger as Global Chair of the Firm’s Private Equity Practice and that Mini vandePol is stepping down as Chair of Compliance & Investigations, with co-chairs Joanna Ludlam, based in London and William (Widge) Devaney in New York succeeding her. In addition, Erik Scheer and Jaime Trujillo have taken over the Chair role of the Firm’s EMEA and Latin America regional councils, replacing Gary Senior and Claudia Prado. 

    Speaking after this announcement, Baker McKenzie’s Global Chair Paul Rawlinson welcomed the new Executive Committee members, Regional Chairs, and Practice Group leaders to their new positions, saying: “We have had plenty to be proud of this year — record client demand for our services, a great crop of new lateral hires, the launch of our market-leading innovation initiative, and our long-term strategic investments in New York, London and China paying off — so I look forward to seeing how our new leadership team will continue to drive our success. I would also like to sincerely thank Gary, Claudia, Michael and Mini for the exceptional leadership they showed in their respective regions and practice groups, supporting the needs of our people and our clients around the globe.”

  • Wolf Theiss Advises ASFINAG on EUR 750 Million Bond Issuance

    Wolf Theiss Advises ASFINAG on EUR 750 Million Bond Issuance

    Wolf Theiss has advised ASFINAG on its issuance of EUR 750 million 0.25% bonds with a maturity of seven years.

    The bond issuance by ASFINAG, the Austrian motorway management and maintenance company is part of its EUR 12 billion guaranteed Euro Medium Term Note Program. The bond was placed by a consortium of banks consisting of Deutsche Bank AG, Erste Group Bank AG, Morgan Stanley & Co. International Plc and Societe Generale as Joint Lead Managers and Raiffeisen Bank International AG und UniCredit Bank Austria AG as Co-Lead Managers.

    The Wolf Theiss team was led by Partner Alexander Haas, supported by Partners Kurt Retter and Niklas Schmidt and Senior Associate Eva Stadler. “We congratulate ASFINAG, especially its Treasury Team led by Gabriele Csoklich, on this successful benchmark bond issuance,” Alexander Haas said.

  • Hengeler Mueller Advises on BAWAG IPO

    Hengeler Mueller Advises on BAWAG IPO

    Hengeler Mueller advised Austrian lender BAWAG Group AG on the successful October 25, 2017 listing of its shares on the Vienna Stock Exchange. Dorda Rechtsanwalte reportedly provided Austrian advice to BAWAG, and Freshfields reportedly advised Joint Global Coordinators and Joint Bookrunners Citigroup Global Markets Limited, Credit Suisse Securities (Europe) Limited, Goldman Sachs International, J.P. Morgan Securities plc, and Morgan Stanley & Co. International plc.

    With a total offer volume of approximately EUR 1.9 billion, Hengeler Mueller describes the transaction as “the biggest IPO ever on the Vienna Stock Exchange and the first significant one in more than three years.” An aggregate of 35 million existing ordinary shares in BAWAG have been placed with institutional and retail investors in Austria by way of a public offering as well as a private placement to selected institutional investors outside of Austria. In addition, 5.25 million shares were made available in connection with an over-allotment option.

    The selling shareholders included funds and accounts controlled or advised by Cerberus Capital Management LP and GoldenTree Asset Management LP, respectively, as well as certain minority shareholders.

    The Frankfurt-based Hengeler Mueller team was led by Partners Johannes Adolff, Dirk Bliesener, and Alexander Rang, and included Partner Ralph Defren, Lucina Berger, Christian Hoefs, and Martin Klein.

    Hengeler Mueller reported that the Dorda team was led by Partners Andreas Zahradnik and Christoph Brogyanyi. 

    Editor’s Note: After this article was published Freshfields confirmed that it acted for the consortium of ten banks in the IPO. The core team consisted of Partners Stephan Pachinger (Vienna), Simone Bono (London), and Christoph Gleske (Frankfurt), with the support of Principal Associate Chris Hall and Associates Simon Fitzpatrick and Wieland Leopold (all in Vienna), together with a larger due diligence team involving, among others, Partner Friedrich Jergitsch and Associate Stella Klepp.

  • FWP Promotes Benedikt Kessler to Junior Partner

    FWP Promotes Benedikt Kessler to Junior Partner

    Fellner Wratzfeld & Partner has promoted Benedikt Kessler to Junior Partner.

    Kessler, who became a registered attorney-at- law in September 2017, specializes in company law, mergers & acquisitions, banking and capital markets law, insolvency law, and corporate restructuring. According to FWP, “apart from earning his law degree at the University of Vienna, he completed two study programs (Business Law and Economics) at the Vienna University of Economics and Business.”

    “The quality of our performance is based on the successful development of our team,” explained Founding Partner Markus Fellner. “This includes taking on board long-serving associates who wish to work with us as attorneys after having successfully passed their exam and being admitted to the Austrian bar association.”