Category: Czech Republic

  • PRK Partners Advises J.P. Morgan on Financing Draslovka’s Acquisition of Mining Business

    PRK Partners has advised sole book runner, transactional advisor, and financing arranger J.P.Morgan on the financing of Draslovka’s acquisition of a mining solution business from Chemours’ for USD 521 million, subject to cash, debt, and working capital adjustments. 

    According to PRK Partners, “the term and revolving facility commitments amounted to USD 368 million and supported equity from Draslovka’s existing shareholders to fund the acquisition.”

    Draslovka, based in Kolin, Czech Republic, operates in the cyanide-based chemical specialties and agricultural chemicals industry. According to PRK Partners,  the company has more than 100 years of experience and its hydrogen cyanide products are applied in the mining industry and agriculture.

    The Chemours Company is listed on the NYSE and delivers chemical products and solutions to refrigeration, air-conditioning, electronics, mining, oil, and gas industries. Chemours globally operates facilities in 120 countries with more than 6,500 employees. 

    PRK Partners’ team included Senior Partner Martin Aschenbrenner, Senior Associates Tomas Vlasak, Jan Ditrych, and Petra Stupkova, and Trainee Veronika Stratilova.

    PRK Partners did not reply to our inquiry on the matter.

  • KSB Advises Focus Estate Fund on Sale of Two Retail Parks to DRFG

    Kocian, Solc, Balastik has advised Focus Estate Fund in the sale of the Centro Ostrava Retail Park in Ostrava and the Most Retail Park in Most to the Czech investment group DRFG. Hartmann, Jelinek, Frana & Partners reportedly advised DRFG on the deal.

    Focus Estate Fund is a real estate investment fund focusing on retail real estate in Central and Eastern Europe.

    According to KSB, “the tenants of the spaces in the retail parks include JYSK, Mountfield, Sportisimo, and Breno Carpets. The total leasable area of both parks is 14,170 square meters.”

    KSB’S team included Partner Jiri Hornik, Counsel Ludek Vrana, Lawyer Jakub Porod, and Junior Lawyer Zuzana Slaba.

     

  • Kocian, Solc, Balastik and Baker McKenzie Advise on Aramark’s Acquisition of Sodexo’s Catering Division

    Kocian, Solc, Balastik has advised Aramark on the acquisition of the catering division of the Czech branch of French company Sodexo. Baker McKenzie advised the seller on the deal.

    Sodexo is engaged in providing services in the areas of canteens, catering, full-service building management, and the operation of food and beverage vending machines.

    According to KSB,  “as a result, Aramark has consolidated its leading position on the catering market in the Czech Republic.”

    KSB’s team was led by Partner Jan Lesak.

    Baker McKenzie’s team included Prague-based Partner Tomas Skoumal and Senior Associate Michal Simcina.

  • Havel & Partners Advises Czechoslovak Capital Partners on Acquisition of Prague Apartment Building

    Havel & Partners has advised the Czechoslovak Capital Partners investment group on its acquisition of the Tusarova 41 rental property in Prague.

    The firm also advised on bank financing, “which enabled the refinancing of the investors’ invested funds and the implementation of a future investment plan in the form of an overall reconstruction and a roof extension of the property.”

    Czechoslovak Capital Partners was formed in 2012, by the transformation of a fund of qualified investors, Sesty Uzavreny Investicni Fond. The fund has been active on the Czech investment market for nine years and more than CZK 3 billion has been invested through it since.

    Havel & Partners’ team included Partner Lukas Syrovy and Managing Associate Jan Fikar.

  • Noerr and Havel & Partners Advise on Magna Automotive Europe’s Acquisition of Klein Automotive

    Noerr has advised Magna Group company Magna Automotive Europe on the acquisition of Czech company Klein Automotive. Havel & Partners advised the sellers.

    According to Noerr, “the acquisition of Klein Automotive by Magna is this year’s largest transaction in the automotive sector in the Czech Republic.”

    Canada-based Magna Group is a mobility technology company and automotive supplier with 347 manufacturing operations. The company has a turnover of approximately USD 40 billion and ten production sites in the Czech Republic.

    Klein Automotive has a production plant in Stity, Eastern Bohemia. The company specializes in the production and supply of machined and formed metal parts for the automotive industry.

    The Noerr team was led by Partner Barbara Kusak and Senior Associate Michal Janicek and included Associated Partner Petr Hrncir, Senior Associate Lucia Luptakova, Associates Barbora Safarikova and David Nemecek, and Legal Advisors Anezka Vecerova and Pavel Hrdy.

    The Havel & Partners team consisted of Partner Vaclav Audes, Managing Associate Silvie Kiraly, and Paralegal Filip Pavlik.

  • Clifford Chance Advises CPI Property Group on EUR 300 Million Investment by Apollo

    Clifford Chance has advised the CPI Property Group on the EUR 300 million subscription of new ordinary shares representing approximately 5.5% of CPIPG’s share capital by Apollo Global Management affiliate managed funds. Allen & Overy reportedly advised Apollo on the deal.

    According to Clifford Chance, “CPIPG is the largest owner of income-generating real estate in the Czech Republic, Berlin, and the CEE region with a property portfolio exceeding EUR 11 billion. The group’s majority shareholder and founder Radovan Vitek also subscribed for 243,506,494 new ordinary shares of CPIPG at EUR 0.616/share, increasing the group’s equity by a further EUR 150 million. CPIPG will therefore have successfully raised EUR 550 million of equity from Mr. Vitek and the Apollo Funds together, during the second half of 2021.”

    Apollo Global Management is a high-growth, alternative asset manager and investor operating in North America, Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Australia, and Latin America. Apollo manages assets of approximately USD 481 billion in credit, private equity, and real assets funds.

    The international Clifford Chance team was led by Prague Managing Partner Alex Cook and included Senior Associate Vladimir Rylich and Associate Tomas Prochazka, with further teams in Luxembourg, Frankfurt, and London.

    Editor’s note: After this article was published, Allen & Overy announced that it had advised Apollo Global Management on the deal. The firm’s team included Poland-based Partner Michal Matera, Counsel Piotr Przybylski, and Associates Krystyna Fatyga and Mateusz Rydzewski, Czech Republic-based Partner Petr Vybiral, Counsel Petra Mysakova, Senior Associate Jana Trhlikova, and Associates Martin Bytcanek, Tomas Kafka, Lucie Cerna, and David Bujgl, with further teams in the UK, Luxembourg, and Germany.

  • New Competition Policy in the Czech Republic?

    At the end of 2020, the Chairman of the Czech Competition Authority (CCA) was replaced. Petr Rafaj, who had been in the position for more than 11 years and who had been linked to several controversial cases, resigned. The government, through a tender procedure, selected his successor: Petr Mlsna. The aim of the 42-year-old lawyer, who has extensive experience working in senior government positions, is to return the good reputation of the CCA. Mlsna emphasizes strengthening the importance of competition law as part of the CCA’s competencies.

    This is a welcome step. In recent years, the CCA’s main visible priority has been the supervision of public procurement. There has also been a change in the Vice-Chairman of the CCA responsible for competition policy. Instead of Hynek Brom, who had been in this position since 2015, Kamil Nejezchleb, a lawyer, economist, and long-time employee of the CCA, has been appointed.

    We can already assess the practical consequences of these personnel changes. How are competition law enforcement and competition policy changing under the CCA, which celebrates its 30th anniversary in 2021?

    From the very beginning of Mlsna’s tenure, the CCA carries more interventions, is more visible in the mass media, and its top management attends professional conferences and seminars. Also, the CCA publishes more press releases, informs more about first instance decisions, and makes it easier for third parties to access these decisions. This is particularly important for entities considering bringing an action for damages.

    Private enforcement of competition law is still undeveloped in the Czech Republic. So far, there are only isolated cases. There are probably several reasons for this situation, which range from the unestablished litigation tradition in this area, through the inexperience of the courts, to the high financial costs of conducting such litigations.

    Under Rafaj’s lead, the CCA was rather skeptical about supporting private enforcement of competition law. This was probably out of fear of jeopardizing public enforcement and reducing the efficiency of the leniency program or the settlement institute. Therefore, the new management’s activity in this field has caught our attention. Mlsna has launched an initiative to alert contracting authorities that they are obliged to enforce damages caused by anti-competitive conduct. Moreover, if the CCA issues a final decision on a cartel, it will approach an aggrieved company to draw its attention to the possibility, or obligation, to bring an action for damages. It remains to be seen whether this initiative will lead to greater development of the private enforcement of competition law.

    After several years, the CCA has returned to conducting sector inquiries. This spring, the CCA launched one focused on the distribution of pharmaceuticals – on the grounds that it had received many complaints in this area, which raise concerns about the proper functioning of the market. However, it is difficult to predict at this stage whether the CCA will subsequently start investigating individual manufacturers and/or distributors of medicinal products.

    The CCA is also toughening up on the sanctions it imposes. For the first time in the history of the CCA, the chairman confirmed a fine amounting to the statutory limit of 10 percent of the undertaking’s turnover (for resale price maintenance). Also, the CCA imposed a sanction consisting of a ban on the performance of public contracts (so-called blacklisting) for the first time, in a bid-rigging case. Speaking of bid-rigging, although the CCA normally calculates fines from the value of the public contract in question, in some cases it does not hesitate to impose a fine from the whole turnover of the undertaking. Mlsna has declared that cartels are criminal and, as such, must be punished severely.

    It is therefore apparent that the changes in the CCA’s management have led to a strengthening of the importance of competition policy and changes in its priorities. Only time will tell whether these changes will lead to more efficient enforcement of competition law, whether we will see more cartels or abuses of dominance uncovered, whether anti-competitive conduct will be severely punished, or whether private enforcement of competition law will be used more. Our guess is that we will see these changes under Mlsna’s lead.

    By Robert Neruda, Partner, and Vladislav Bernard, Associate, Havel &  Partners

    This Article was originally published in Issue 8.9 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.

  • PwC Legal Advises Renfe on Acquisition in Leo Express

    PwC Legal has advised Spanish railway company Renfe on the acquisition of a stake in the Czech carrier Leo Express. 

    According to PwC Legal, Renfe subscribed to newly issued shares and became the largest shareholder of Leo Express with a 50% stake.

    PwC Legal’s team included Senior Attorneys Vendelin Balog and Daniel Pikal and Junior Associates Barbora Satrova and Veronika Siposova.

  • Jan Holasek Joins Forces with HKDW Legal to Form HKDW Holasek

    Jan Holasek, a Czech Senator and founder of Havel, Holasek & Partners – now Havel & Partners – has joined forces with HKDW Legal to form a new law firm under the name HKDW Holasek.

    According to the newly formed firm, its headquarters will be in Prague and its work will focus on “Czech clients as well as international legal markets, including Germany, Austria, Scandinavia, Great Britain, US, and Asia.”

    HKDW Holasek has four equity partners – Jan Hrazdira, Jaromir Kaluzik, Lukas Nyvlt, and Jan Holasek – in addition to a team of over 20 lawyers. According to the firm, plans are to cater to “all areas of law with a particular focus on litigation and arbitration, insolvency and restructuring, mergers and acquisitions, real estate, construction and development, criminal law, corporate and commercial as well as legal counseling in the insurance and banking sectors.”

    Hrazdira and Kaluzik co-founded HKDW Legal in 2000.

    Nyvlt joined HKDW Legal in 2017. Earlier in his career, he spent 13 years with Glatzova & Co and over six and a half years with NH Partners.

    Holasek holds a Master’s degree in Law from Charles University as well as an LL.M. from NYU. He is a founding partner of what is now Havel & Partners, a firm with which he spent 16 years of his career. In addition to that, he spent four years with Kocian Solc Balastik. In 2020, he was elected as an independent senator of the Parliament of the Czech Republic

    “We want to focus primarily on local and international profile cases and on providing legal services at the level of large international law firms,” says Holasek. “Our goal is to always deliver the highest possible level of legal expertise while maintaining a personal client approach and a team atmosphere within the company.”

    “We want to forge long-term relationships with our clients and provide them with top legal support benefiting from a perfect understanding of their business needs and requirements,” adds Hrazdira, Founding Partner of HKDW Legal. “I also take great pride in the fact that my partners and I take an active part in legal counsel and solving of legal issues our clients encounter.”

  • Havel & Partners and Noerr Advise on Genesis Capital’s Sale of Quinta-Analytica

    Havel & Partners has advised Genesis Private Equity Fund III on the sale of Quinta-Analytica to LVA Holding. Noerr advised the buyer on the deal.

    Genesis Private Equity Fund III is a part of the Genesis Capital Group, which invests in small and medium-sized companies in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland, Hungary, and Austria. LVA Holding is a part of the German group BBA Capital Partners. Quinta-Analytica is a provider of drug testing & bioanalytical services.

    Havel & Partners’ team included Partner Vaclav Audes, Senior Associate Veronika Filipova, and Paralegal Filip Pavlik.

    Noerr’s team included Partner Barbara Kusak, Senior Associates Lucia Luptakova, Michal Janicek, and Filip Murar, Associate Barbora Safarikova, and Legal Advisors Pavel Hrdy and Matej Korduliak.

    Editorial note: This article originally erroneously stated that Noer had advised the sellers on the deal. The information has now been corrected.