Category: Czech Republic

  • CMS and Dentons Advise on Reico Acquisition of Czech Office Building from HB Reavis

    CMS and Dentons Advise on Reico Acquisition of Czech Office Building from HB Reavis

    CMS Prague has advised Reico on its CZK 2.3 billion acquisition of the Metronome office building in Prague from HB Reavis. Dentons advised HB Reavis on the sale.

    The Metronom Business Center was completed in 2015. It is a modern, ten-story office complex with nearly 34,000 square meters of space near Prague’s Nove Butovice metro station. The structure consists of three interconnected buildings leased by BMW, AbbVi, and German software company SAP SE.

    The CMS team was led by Partner Lukas Hejduk and included Senior Associate Pavel Srb and Junior Associates Ivana Lobotkova and Lenka Chmielova.

    The Dentons team was led by Partner Michal Hink, supported by Partner Marketa Tvrda and Associate Veronika Kundeliusova.

     

  • Kinstellar to Advise GNSS

    Kinstellar to Advise GNSS

    Kinstellar, in a consortium with BHO Legal, a boutique firm focusing on satellite and aviation projects, participated as equal partners in a tender offer for the provision of legal services to GNSS.

    According to Kinstellar, “the focus of Kinstellar will be to provide legal advice and support for procurement, contract management related to security, as well as on regulatory and liability aspects related to security of the Galileo and EGNOS programs.” According to the firm, ”they have concluded a contract, which can last up to four years, the maximum value for one contract being EUR 2 million, and the tasks will also concern intellectual property rights protection and management, matters related to transfers of technology.”

    Zdenek Kucera, Kinstellar’s Head of the Technology͵ Media & Telecommunications and Litigation practices, and who will lead Kinstellar’s team on the matter, said: “We are happy to participate in such a unique communication technology project like Galileo. We believe that we succeeded in a unique area of services, and we can prove that we understand the legal aspects of security monitoring, penetration testing as well as technology procurements. Our mandate can last up to four years of cooperation and will involve advisors from Prague as well as our other offices.”

    Kinstellar Partner Kamil Blazek added: “We formed a unique consortium combining a boutique firm with a special focus on aviation with an international firm with strong experience in the areas of security, information technology procurements and infrastructure. We believe that such a consortium of equal partners is a great combination for the GSA.”

    The BHO Legal team is led by Partner Oliver Heinrich.

     

  • Michal Matejka Appointed Legal Director at Baker McKenzie Prague

    Michal Matejka Appointed Legal Director at Baker McKenzie Prague

    Michal Matejka, Head of International Commercial & Trade at Baker McKenzie Prague, has been appointed Legal Director, effective July 1, 2018.

    Matejka joined Baker McKenzie Prague in 2001. According to Baker McKenzie, “he advises on all facets of international commercial law including, inter alia, international trade, distribution and agency agreements, franchising, advertising and consumer protection. He also focuses on information technology and intellectual property matters including IP enforcement, license agreements, domain name rights enforcement, unfair competition, software piracy, IT outsourcing and IT system integration as well as resolution of disputes related to his areas of specialization.”

    In addition, according to Baker McKenzie, “he regularly lectures on IP/IT law and commercial law matters at the Czech Technical University, the Charles University in Prague as well as the Prague branch of the International Chamber of Commerce and authored several books, media articles and presentations regarding topics of commercial law, intellectual property and information technology. He is a panelist for .cz domain names alternative dispute resolution and generic top level domain names dispute resolution.”

     

  • BPV Braun Partners Advises Prazska Energetika on Acquisition of Solarinvest-Green Energy

    BPV Braun Partners Advises Prazska Energetika on Acquisition of Solarinvest-Green Energy

    BPV Braun Partners has assisted PREmereni, a subsidiary of Prazske Energetika, on the purchase of family-owned Solarinvest-Green Energy.

    The acquisition was planned in relation to a recent amendment to the Czech Republic’s Energy Act, making it easier and more advantageous for customers to build photovoltaic power plants. The contract was signed on May 3, 2018.

    Solarinvest, founded in 2008, installs roof-based solar power plants, heat pumps, and air conditioning systems, as well as providing public and industrial LED lighting and other technologies. 

    According to bpv Braun Partners, “Solarinvest also remains active in development and, as part of the industry, tries to play a role in improving the legislative framework for developing renewable resources in the Czech Republic.”

    PREmereni is a subsidiary of Prazske Energetika. The concern’s basic activities include electricity and gas trading and sales throughout the Czech Republic, as well as electricity distribution, generation, and supplementary energy services.

    According to bpv Braun Partners, “PREmereni is offering a new comprehensive service in installing and servicing photovoltaic power plants, expanding into this new area by drawing on the experience of companies that specialize in photovoltaics. It now has access to the family-owned Solarinvest-Green Energy, s.r.o., which has more than ten years of experience specializing in rooftop photovoltaic systems.”

    The bpv Braun Partners team was led by Partner Marc Muller, supported by team members Senior Associate Michal Fogel and Managing Associate Lucie Kalasova. 

     

  • Clifford Chance Advises Europa Capital on Sale of Prague Office Building

    Clifford Chance Advises Europa Capital on Sale of Prague Office Building

    Clifford Chance has advised real estate investment company Europa Capital on the sale of Prague’s Hadovka Office Park office buildin, to Wood & Company, a regional investment bank headquartered in the city. Dentons advised Wood & Company on the acquisition.

    According to Clifford Chance, Hadovka Office Park, which was completed in 2000, is an A-class office development consisting of two buildings offering 22,265 square meters of leasable office space over five floors. The property is located on Evropska street in Prague 6, the principal arterial route between the Vaclav Havel international airport and the city center.

    The Clifford Chance team was led by Partner Emil Holub and included Senior Associate Aneta Sosnovcova and Junior Associate Matej Kucera.

    The Denton’s team was led by Partner Jiri Strzinek and included Partner Marketa Tvrda and Associate Jan Hrivnak.

     

  • CEE Attorneys Assists LeaderFin Obtain Credit Provider License

    CEE Attorneys Assists LeaderFin Obtain Credit Provider License

    CEE Attorneys has advised Czech consumer credit provider LeaderFin s.r.o on obtaining a non-bank consumer credit provider license and a listing in the Czech National Bank register of non-bank consumer credit providers.

    “At the end of 2016 a new consumer credit regulation came in effect in Czech Republic,” said CEE Attorneys Founding Partner Zdenek Tomicek. “Given the scope of the regulatory requirements and its complexity, the new regulation hit the consumer credit market at its core. Out of thousands of consumer credit providers operating in compliance with the former regulation, less than a hundred were granted a license by the Czech National Bank, one of them being LeaderFin.” 

    The CEE Attorneys team consisted of Managing Associate Iveta Koubkova and Associate Martin Dohnal.

     

  • Randa Havel Legal Advises Sellers on Sale of Jewelry Chain in Czech Republic

    Randa Havel Legal Advises Sellers on Sale of Jewelry Chain in Czech Republic

    Randa Havel Legal has advised four stakeholders of New Presence Jewels s.r.o., which operates the Presence chain of jewelry stores in the Czech Republic and Slovakia in their sale of the company to the Poland’s Polish Luxury Group.

    Polish Luxury Group is a seller of jewelry in Poland. Through its acquisition of Presence stores, Polish Luxury Group enters the Czech market.  

    The Randa Havel Legal team was led by Partner Alois Satava and Senior Associate Michal Palinkas.

    Editor’s Note: After this article was published CEE Legal Market has been informed that the four stakeholders were private investors from France, Belgium and Czech Republic, who sold 100% of their shares in the company. Polish Luxury Group was represented by Samak law firm.

     

  • D4 Motorway PPP Coming to Market

    It’s been quite a wait, but the D4 Motorway PPP project should be coming to market in April. The project will involve the design, construction, financing, operation and maintenance of a 36 km stretch of motorway between Pribram and Pisek in the south west of the Czech Republic, with operation and maintenance of an adjacent 16 km of existing motorway.

    The last PPP road project to get off the drawing board in Czechia was the D47 project back in 2002, which ended in fiasco when a contract was awarded to an Israeli investor without a proper tender. The D4 project has not had an easy start either. The project was approved by the government in January 2016, but more than a year was lost when the advisory tender held by the Ministry of Transport (MOT) got bogged down in multiple appeals. 

    The key milestones of the D4 tender are expected to be notification of pre-qualification to an unlimited number of interested parties in April, submission by them of requests to participate in the competitive dialogue procedure in June (resulting in a shortlist of four participants), with the competitive dialogue proper starting in October. Commercial close (signature of the project agreement by the MOT and the selected bidder) seems doable by year-end, and financial close (the agreement of all finance documents and ancillary agreements) could be achieved in Q1 2019. 

    Participants in the tender will need to navigate a weird legal landscape shaped by the specific conditions of Czech public procurement law (which has changed more than 25 times since the days of the D47!), as well as laws enacted over the years in preparation for a PPP market that has never arrived. 

    The provisions of the Public Procurement Act that required government approval of the project no longer apply, although the project is being structured as a competitive dialogue in accordance with the 2016 approval. Hopefully, methods developed on successful Slovak road deals over the past few years will be used and we won’t have to reinvent the wheel.

    Historically, there was a kind of procurement bogeyman in this country, in the existence of both public contracts and concession contracts (initially regulated by separate acts but since 2016 sitting together in the Public Procurement Act). If the substance of a given project fulfilled the statutory definition of a concession (in the context of a roads project, the private sector taking material volume risk), the contract needed to be procured as a concession. This was true even if the deal terms changed mid-tender, requiring cancellation of the tender and a return to square one. Now a concession contract can, for instance, be tendered using a competitive dialogue. There was also a requirement to request an opinion from the Ministry of Finance (MOF) on the economic impacts of a concession agreement prior to its signature. Failure to do so rendered the contract absolutely void under relevant case law. The requirement remains in the law, however it should not apply at the ministry level.

    So there’s no need to be worried. Or is there? A handful of paragraphs in the Roads Act, shoe-horned in to ease concerns about the legality of the D47 project, create the concept of a concessionaire contract, which, despite sounding very much like a concession contract, is a different animal. A concessionaire contract is clearly not subject to MOF supervision. On the other hand, the Roads Act does require approval of a concessionaire contract by the government and of the state’s financial obligations set out in it by parliament. Since last year’s general election, communists and right-wing nationalists have gained in strength and confidence. This may well cause concern for bidders — especially international ones. How to address the risk of getting within a whisker of commercial close, only for parliament to throw the project out? Not in the concessionaire contract, because the parliamentary procedure occurs before it is signed, but perhaps in a side agreement providing that bid costs (and some loss of profit?) will be compensated.

    So fingers crossed that all goes to plan. If so, there should be plenty of work for firms with experience in this area, whether for the contracting authority, sponsors, banks or sub-contractors. And if a successful precedent is created, next up could be the D7, D6, or D35!  

    By Christian Blatchford, Partner, Kocian Solc Balastík

    This Article was originally published in Issue 5.3 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.

  • Dorda Advises on Eversports Series A Financing

    Dorda has advised the Czech private equity and venture capital firm Enern on the Series A financing of Vienna-based online sport booking service Eversports.

    The fresh funding was raised together with a consortium of other VC firms, including Market One Capital, Russmedia, and existing backers Point Nine Capital, RTA Ventures, and Gerbig Ventures. The investment will be used for the company’s expansion in the Germanic region and for the further development of the software.

    Enern is a private equity and venture capital firm specializing in early-stage and medium-sized investments in Fintech sector. The firm, which is based in Prague, with an additional office in Warsaw, invests in energy and consumer internet companies.  

    Eversports is a software-as-a-service-enabled marketplace that brings sports providers and athletes together.

    The Dorda team was led by Managing Partner Martin Brodey, supported by Associate Florian Karall.

    Editor’s Note: After this article was published Herbst Kinsky announced that it advised Eversports on raising finances from Enern. The team was led by Partner Philipp Kinsky, supported by Attorney David Pachernegg, and Associate Felix Kernbichler.

  • Havel & Partners and BPV Braun Partners Advise on Progroup Refinancing

    Havel & Partners and the Frankfurt office of Latham & Watkins have advised a consortium of banks as initial purchasers of 3% senior secured notes in an aggregate principal amount of EUR 450 million due in 2026 issued by Progroup AG and a second consortium of banks in relation to several facilities agreements in an aggregate of more than EUR 600 million (equivalent). Mayer Brown’s Dusseldorf office and bpv Braun Partners advised Progroup on German law and Czech law, respectively.

    The bond issuance and the restatements of the facilities agreement were two parts of a large single transaction.

    The consortium of banks that purchased the secured notes from Progroup consisted of Deutsche Bank AG, London Branch, Commerzbank Aktiengesellschaft, HSBC Bank plc, Goldman Sachs International, and J.P. Morgan Securities plc.

    The second consortium of banks that issued loans to Progroup consisted of Commerzbank Aktiengesellschaft, HSBC Trinkaus & Burkhardt AG, Deutsche Bank Luxembourg S.A., Goldman Sachs International, Goldman Sachs International Bank, J.P. Morgan Securities plc, Deutsche Bank AG, London Branch, IKB Deutsche Industriebank AG, Goldman Sachs Lending Partners LLC, Goldman Sachs Bank USA, and Wilmington Trust (London) Limited.

    According to Havel & Partners, Progroup decided to refinance its maturing bonds by way of a new tap under its existing bond program and made certain amendments (subject to a non-disclosure agreement) to its existing facilities agreements.

    Progroup AG is a family-owned manufacturer of containerboard and corrugated board in Central Europe, with subsidiaries based in Germany, Czech Republic, Poland, and the UK — co-obligors under this cross-border transaction.

    The Havel & Partners team consisted of Associate Michal Ranostaj and Junior Associate Petra Batovska.

    The bpv Braun Partners team consisted of Partner David Vosol and Senior Associate Zuzana Stepankova.