Category: Bulgaria

  • CMS Completes Restructuring of Photovoltaic Producer EU Sunday in Bulgaria

    CMS Completes Restructuring of Photovoltaic Producer EU Sunday in Bulgaria

    CMS has successfully assisted Korea’s SDN Company Ltd on its successful regaining of control over photo-voltaic producer EU Sunday AD, which operates three projects in Bulgaria with 15 MWp installed capacity.

    According to CMS, “the project included complex insolvency proceedings, which were concluded by means of a Restructuring plan with full compensation of all minority creditors and the Bulgarian National Revenue Agency, and approved by the Sofia city court. The project included negotiations of various agreements with UniCredit Bulbank, legal assistance to eight of the EU Sunday AD’s creditors during the insolvency procedure, assistance with the preparation and approval of the Restructuring plan and completion of the registration of the changes with the Bulgarian Commercial Register.”

    CMS’s team was led by Sofia Managing Partner Kostadin Sirleshtov and included Associates Borislava Piperkova, Elena Yotova-Yordanova, Raya Yoncheva, and Dimitar Dimitrov.

  • Kambourov & Partners Helps Yotpo Acquire SMSBump

    Kambourov & Partners Helps Yotpo Acquire SMSBump

    Kambourov & Partners has advised Yotpo on its acquisition of SMSBump.

    Bulgaria’s SMSBump was established in 2017, and according to Kambourov & Partners, it “offers a complete SMS marketing solution allowing brands to drive engagement, improve retention, and increase lifetime value.”

    According to Yotpo CEO and Co-founder Tomer Tagrin, “adding SMS to the platform will provide customers with new possibilities to combine UGC and loyalty seamlessly to create powerful experiences on a channel that consumers interact with constantly.”

    Kambourov & Partners’ team was led by Partner Veronika Hadjieva.

  • The Buzz in Bulgaria with Victor Gugushev of Gugushev & Partners Law Office

    The Buzz in Bulgaria with Victor Gugushev of Gugushev & Partners Law Office

    “Unfortunately, the political situation in Bulgaria is somewhat fragile,“ says Victor Gugushev, Partner at Gugushev & Partners in Sofia. “Parliament made changes to the legislation regarding the gambling industry, but it based its decision on unclear grounds and motives.“ In addition, he says the National Lottery of Bulgaria is set to be “practically nationalized“ which could have a serious impact on the economy. “For the past three or four years, the taxes paid by the National Lottery amounted to almost a quarter billion euros. I’m not commenting whether that is right or wrong, but I am concerned about the way it was done and the agenda behind it,“ he says.

    Additionally, there’s an ongoing controversy related to the release of audiotapes of Bulgarian President Rumen Radev by the country’s prosecutor’s office. “The public reaction to this was clear,” Gugushev explained. “It is not fair game to wire the president if you don’t have solid grounds for that, even more, to release the tapes in the public domain. There is serious debate among the Bulgarian legal society as to whether such behavior from the prosecutor’s office might even be considered a crime.“

    Still, Gugushev believes that, in spite of all, the economy is doing well. “We have a lot of stable companies and there are no other upcoming major changes in the legislative pipeline. We are one step closer to accepting the euro and this is something positively expected by Bulgarian businesses.“

  • Bulgaria: Approaching Deadline for Inactive Companies

    Bulgaria: Approaching Deadline for Inactive Companies

    Pursuant to the Bulgarian Accountancy Act (Закон за счетоводството) companies must publish in the Commercial Register and Register for Nonprofit Legal Entities (“Commercial Register“) their annual financial statements by 30 June of the calendar year following the reported period. Companies which have not carried out any activity during the reported period are exempt from this obligation. Prerequisite for the exemption is that the company’s lack of activity is expressly declared before the Commercial Register.

    Who is responsible?

    • The management may declare before the Commercial Register that the company has been inactive.

    What is the filing deadline?

    •  31 March 2020. 
    •  If the company misses this deadline, it will have to publish its annual financial statements for 2019 by 30 June 2020.

    What is the filing fee?

    • There is no filing fee for the Commercial Register for declaring inactivity.
    • However, if the above deadline is missed and the company must thus publish its annual financial statements, a filing fee will be due for the publication of the annual financial statements (regardless if the company is actually inactive).

    What form and documents?

    • Sample form declaration confirming that the company is inactive and other standard documents for the Commercial Register.
    • The filing in the Commercial Register can be done electronically.

    When is a company inactive?

    •  A company is deemed inactive when it has not carried out commercial transactions during the reported period, has not engaged in investment, production and/or sale activities, has not purchased goods and services for the purpose of obtaining income and profit and when for the reported period no conditions to recognize income have occurred.

    By Gergana Roussinova, Associate, Schoenherr

  • Bulgarian Watchdog Introduces Simplified and More Extensive Merger Filing in New Merger Filing Guidelines

    Bulgarian Watchdog Introduces Simplified and More Extensive Merger Filing in New Merger Filing Guidelines

    From 1 January 2020, the Bulgarian Commission for the Protection of Competition (the “CPC”) has been applying new merger filing guidelines (the “Guidelines”). The former guidelines, applied for more than ten years, did not differentiate between transactions (simpler or more complex) irrespectively of their potential competition concerns. This unified approach was unnecessarily bureaucratic with regard to concentrations with insignificant market effect (i.e. insignificant combined shares of the parties), which required a detailed merger filing only because the parties’ turnover reached the statutory thresholds. At the same time, the former guidelines did not seem extensive enough for more complicated transactions (with substantial market shares of the parties), and it was not unusual for the CPC to send to the parties several requests for additional information to assess and clear a concentration. Naturally, this approach led to delays both in simpler and more complex transactions.

    The Guidelines address this practical problem and now provide for two types of filings: a simplified merger filing for mergers that are unlikely to raise competition concerns and a more extensive merger filing for concentrations which are expected to significantly affect the relevant markets.

    Another substantial change introduced in the Guidelines is the possibility for the notifying party to request remedies with the merger filing notification itself. Previously, remedies could be proposed during phase 2 proceedings only (in-depth investigation).  

    The CPC also for the first time officially provides that the notifying party can request a pre-notification meeting to discuss the information and documents that would be required for the merger filing (a practice established unofficially by the CPC in the last two years).

    Requests for waivers in individual cases are also provided. The Guidelines specify that companies can request waivers from the CPC to give certain information. The waivers can be done in the merger filing notification itself and should provide justification for why certain categories of information are not applicable. Since the Guidelines do not provide for a separate form of such requests or the obligation of the CPC to issue an explicit decision on them, it is recommendable to discuss such potential waivers within pre-notification contacts.

    The Guidelines also explicitly provide that only full translation of the documents enclosed as evidence will be accepted. This means that all documents supporting the concentration (e.g. SPAs, Memorandums, etc.) would need to be translated in full and waiver of this rule cannot apply (a practice followed by the CPC in the last year).

    Simplified merger filing

    The Commission set thresholds under which concentration cases are eligible for a simplified merger filing:

    (i) for markets in which two merging companies compete (“horizontal overlap markets”), the threshold is set to up to 15 %;

    (ii) for markets where one of the merging companies sells an input to a market where the other company is active (“vertically related markets”, for instance where an automaker acquires a manufacturer of car parts), the threshold is set to up to 25 %.

    In the simplified merger control filing the notifying party should provide information about the purchaser(s) and the seller(s), describe the transaction, their business activities and provide the turnover figures that the Commission needs to establish jurisdiction. The relevant markets and market shares of the undertakings concerned should also be specified. However, unlike before, there is no need to provide very detailed information about the entire relevant market(s) (barriers to entry, structure of supply and demand, effects of the concentration on the market, biggest competitors and their market shares, membership in industry-wide associations, etc.). Thus, it seems that for simpler transactions the collection of information and documents would be significantly relieved. 

    Standard merger filing: significantly more extensive than before

    On the other hand, the standard merger filing that would apply for markets where the horizontal overlap is equal to or exceeds 15 % – or where the vertical related market shares of the parties reach or exceed 25 % – would be much lengthier. For these transactions, the Guidelines provide for more than 60 questions. In addition, the information in response to such questions should concern the last two or three years and the next two years (under the former guidelines the requested information concerned only the last financial year). Some of the questions are known from the former guidelines but the CPC has significantly elaborated the matters that need to be covered in a merger filing.

    Short-form and full decision? 

    The Guidelines do not provide for short-form and standard notification form. They instead specify that certain sections are not applicable where the simplified merger control filing thresholds are met.

    In addition, the CPC has not explicitly provided that a concentration that fulfils the criteria for a simplified merger control review would be decided with a short-form decision, while for the other transaction a full decision would be issued.

    Likewise, there are no differences in the deadline to review a simplified and standard transaction (i.e. the statutory term of 25 working days would apply in both ways).

    Thus, it is yet to be seen in practice whether fast-track proceedings and short-form decisions would be applied to simpler transactions or whether the only relevant change would be to the volume of information and documents required from the notifying parties.

    By Galina Petkova, Attorney at Law, Schoenherr

  • Tokushev and Partners Advises DZI on Acquisition of Mall Varna

    Tokushev and Partners Advises DZI on Acquisition of Mall Varna

    Tokushev and Partners has advised DZI – General Insurance on its acquisition of Mall Varna for EUR 16 million from Hydrostroy.

    According to Tokushev and Partners, “the complex is completely transformed into a business center and consists of two interconnected buildings with a total floor area of 27,393 square meters. The newly-acquired asset shall be used by DZI for its own needs, as well as providing office spaces to other companies.”

    Tokushev and Partners’ team included Partners Viktor Tokushev, Ivan Antov, and Stiliyan Nedev.

  • Kinstellar Advises GTC on Lease in Sofia

    Kinstellar Advises GTC on Lease in Sofia

    Kinstellar has advised GTC on its lease of of 4,000 square meters in the Advance Business Center II, an office building in Sofia, Bulgaria, that is expected to open near the end of this year.

    GTC, a subsidiary of Lone Star, is a real estate investor and developer in Central and Eastern Europe.

    Kinstellar’s team included Partner Antonia Mavrova, Managing Associate Mladen Minev, and Associate Simeon Vachev.

    Kinstellar did not reply to our inquiry on the matter.

  • CMS Advises Hyundai Electric on Sale of Hyundai Heavy Industries Bulgaria

    CMS Advises Hyundai Electric on Sale of Hyundai Heavy Industries Bulgaria

    CMS has advised Hyundai Electric & Energy Systems on the sale of its Bulgarian subsidiary Hyundai Heavy Industries Co. Bulgaria AD to the IBG Group. EY Law reportedly advised the buyers.

    Hyundai Heavy Industries Bulgaria develops, manufactures, and distributes transformers and tap changers for large-scale industrial applications. It operates a production facility in Sofia.

    CMS’s team in Bulgaria included Partner Gentscho Pavlov and Senior Associates Marin Drinov and Antonia Kehayova, while the firm’s Germany-based team included Partners Martin Kolbinger, Peter Endres, Stefan Luft, Markus Hauser, and Bjorn Herbers, Attorney Michael Suh, Senior Associate Martin Maurer, and Associates Lukas Stegemann and Annika Lindemann.

  • Nikolay Cvetanov Becomes Managing Partner at Penkov, Markov & Partners

    Nikolay Cvetanov Becomes Managing Partner at Penkov, Markov & Partners

    Attorney-at-Law Nikolay Cvetanov has been named Managing Partner at Penkov, Markov & Partners in Bulgaria.

    Cvetanov joined Penkov, Markov & Partners in 2008, immediately after graduating from the Sofia University St. Kliment Ohridski. 

    According to Penkov, Markov & Partners, “Cvetanov will perform the operational management of the company and will participate alongside the chairman in solving strategic issues and all other important matters. His expertise in Commercial and Corporate law, Finance and Banking, as well as in new areas such as Personal Data Protection and Anti-Money Laundering Measures, and most importantly his energy, dedication and full integration within the company, are important and promising prerequisites for giving new impulses for the development of the company.”

  • Kambourov & Partners Advises Bankia on Loan Portfolio Transfer

    Kambourov & Partners Advises Bankia on Loan Portfolio Transfer

    Kambourov & Partners has advised Spain’s Bankia bank on a loan portfolio transfer in which part of the receivables was secured by collateral provided by Bulgarian companies.

    The Kambourov & Partners team included Partner Atanas Shopov and Senior Associate Dimitar Aleksandrov.

    Kambourov & Partners did not reply to our inquiry.