Category: Estonia

  • Sorainen Advises on Helsinki-Tallinn Tunnel Investment

    Sorainen Advises on Helsinki-Tallinn Tunnel Investment

    Sorainen has advised FinEst Bay Area Development on signing a memorandum of understanding for EUR 15 billion in financing with China’s Touchstone Capital Partners for an undersea train tunnel linking Helsinki with Tallinn.

    Under the memorandum, one-third of the funding will come as a private equity investment – giving Touchstone a minority stake in the project – and two-thirds will be debt financing.

    According to Sorainen, FinEst Bay Area raised the first external funding of EUR 100 million from Dubai-based construction company ARJ Holding in December 2018, and it is seeking European investors to join.

    On December 12, 2018 CEE Legal matters reported on Sorainen’s appointment as legal advisor for the FinEst Bay Area Development tunnel project.

    According to Sorainen, Finland and Estonia have considered linking their capitals – which are divided by the Gulf of Finland – for years. Tens of thousands of Estonians work in the Helsinki area, making the weekly commute by sea, while Tallinn is a popular tourist destination for Finns. A tunnel would cut the travel time to around 20 minutes from the current two-hour ride on a ferry.

    The Sorainen team was led by Partner Paul Kunnap and Senior Associate Sandra Mikli.

    Sorainen informed CEE Legal Matters that it was unable to disclose any additional information on the deal

  • Cobalt Advises Nextclinics on F-Est Acquisition

    Cobalt Advises Nextclinics on F-Est Acquisition

    Cobalt has advised Nextclinics International GmbH on the acquisition of a 100% stake in reproductive medical services provider F-Est OU, the owner of the Fertility Clinic Nordic assisted reproductive technology clinic. The value of the deal was not disclosed.

    Nextclinics operates a network of modern specialized healthcare facilities and offers care primarily in allergology, clinical immunology, pneumology, and other related fields. Headquartered in Germany, the company, which entered the Estonian market in 2015, “aims to foster innovative procedures in healthcare combining diagnostic and treatment methods with a patient and client-centric approach and using high-tech communication technology.”

    Fertility Clinic Nordic was founded in 2010. The clinic offers a range of fertility services, including in vitro fertilization, preimplantation genetic testing, egg and sperm donation, and social freezing options.

    Cobalt’s team consisted of Partners Peeter Kutman and Karina Paatsi, Specialist Counsel Ott Aava, Senior Associate Heili Haabu, Associate Liina Saaremets, and Assistant Lawyer Tiit-Gregor Mets.

    Cobalt did not reply to our inquiries about the deal.

  • Ellex Raidla Advises Magnetic MRO on Bonds Issuance

    Ellex Raidla Advises Magnetic MRO on Bonds Issuance

    Ellex Raidla has advised Magnetic MRO, a global provider of technical care for aircraft operators and lessors, on a bonds issue worth a total of EUR 8 million.

    According to Ellex, the capital raised by the bond issue will be used to acquire a competitor operating in the same industry and expand Magnetic MRO’s business. In February 2019 Nasdaq announced that the bonds of Magnetic MRO were admitted to trading to the Nasdaq Baltic First North by Nasdaq Tallinn.

    Magnetic MRO CEO Risto Maeots commented: “Magnetic MRO has expanded rapidly in the last couple of years. Despite our fast growth, we hold a very small percentage of the global aircraft maintenance market and there is a lot of room for us to gain a bigger market share. Furthermore, our expansion plans are supported by the industry’s overall stable growth.”

    Ellex Raidla’s team consisted of Partner Raino Paron and Senior Associate Helen Ratso.

  • Sorainen Advises Brainbase on USD 1 Million Seed Round

    Sorainen Advises Brainbase on USD 1 Million Seed Round

    Sorainen and Gunderson Dettmer in Los Angeles have advised Brainbase on a successfully completed USD 1 million seed round. The round was led by Tera Ventures, with participation from Sterling Road and several angel investors, including Severin Hacker, Andrew Rabin, and Hamid Barkhordar.

    Brainbase is a Los Angeles and Tallinn-based technology startup founded in 2016 by Nate Cavanaugh, Karl Johan Vallner, and Nikolai Tolkatshjov. According to Cavanaugh, “we are building an end-to-end product ecosystem that gives companies new ways to manage and monetize their intellectual property through licensing.”

    According to Sorainen’s press release, the funds obtained will be used to continue developing the company’s debut product, Brainbase Assist, a tool for brands and licensees to manage and automate the licensing process. Brainbase Assist, Sorainen reports, “is the first out-of-the-box licensing management tool that enables companies to bring licensed products to market faster with powerful collaboration tools, sales and royalty reporting, smart contract management, secure digital asset management and analytics on important metrics such as sales performance and rights availability.”

    The Sorainen team was led by Partner Toomas Prangli and included Senior Associate Hanna Pahk and Associate Mirell Prosa.

    Sorainen reported that it was unable to disclose additional information about the deal. 

  • Guest Editorial: CEE Legal Counsel Going Forward – Experts or Advisors?

    Upon reflection, 2018 feels like a year of reversal – the long economic expansion, fueled by quantitative easing by central banks, is losing steam, love for FAANGs and Big Tech turned into techlash, trade wars emerged and escalated, a negotiated divorce between the UK and the EU is descending into a disorderly no-deal Brexit, and so on. There is much to ponder in the short-term. Long-term challenges for the legal profession, however, lie elsewhere.

    Many would agree that 2018 saw Legal Tech and AI move from the fringes of the CEE legal scene to the center of operations in the regions’ law firms – the process of employing technology to reduce costs which kicked-off amid the global financial crisis has shifted into a higher gear with ever more resources employed to test applications in legal due diligence, contract drafting, review or automation, legal research and analytics, etc.

    And rightly so, as the disruption of legal markets – in CEE as everywhere else – by increasingly sophisticated technology is inevitable. The reasons are well-documented and there to see for all willing to pay attention.

    However, our response to this challenge looks lop-sided: the majority of our attention and effort is aimed at addressing structural weaknesses and keeping-up in areas being commoditized. Increased use and nurturing of core strengths are not widely seen as part of the solution, even though skills such as creative problem solving, critical and instinctive thinking, negotiation, and conflict resolution abilities are key qualities during the transformational change brought by the emergence of artificial intelligence.

    This is not to say that CEE law firms should cut back investments into cost-reducing or efficiency-boosting technologies. But a more diversified and sophisticated strategy is needed.

    Considering the nature of the intelligent technology challenge and its effects on the delivery of legal services (i.e., automating tasks within the legal process), the long-term strategy of our profession, in CEE and elsewhere, should be centered around a move away from being (or being seen as) merely experts – i.e., as tools or resources – to being advisers: critical, creative and resilient users of available tools (including, of course, Legal Tech) to solve problems.

    Is that easier said than done? Yes. Is it doable? Absolutely. In fact, there are many ways to be an adviser, not merely an expert – every person and firm can adopt one, or more. Some “ways” are obvious, some less so. I’ll outline two examples to get the discussion going.

    First, a world of human-displacing machines and massive job losses is neither imminent nor inevitable: something that leaders will need to get better at explaining to the anxious public. But it is also true that the use of artificial intelligence, blockchain, and so on, is spreading and becoming more sophisticated, and, crucially, looks irreversible. Thus, for AI to flourish and fulfil its promise as an “enabler” rather than a “destroyer,” new rules need to be introduced or, preferably, existing ones adapted. Active participation in this process represents an opportunity not only to remain relevant, but to attract and on-board Generation Z (members of which are seeking more purpose in their work).

    Second, 2019 will see the introduction of the EU framework for screening – by Member States and the European Commission – of incoming foreign direct investment by state-owned or -controlled entities into critical infrastructure, technology, or inputs in Europe and, potentially, prohibiting foreign FDIs on security or public order grounds.

    Such de jure or de facto pre-closing consent regimes, which evaluate deals for security or public order concerns, have been popping up across Europe for some time – in CEE, Austria, Poland, and Lithuania have introduced one. While these regimes differ in terms of targeted sectors, level of control, origin of investment, and type of investors, they all expose transactions to increased costs, delays, and uncertainty. Worse, as we experienced in Latvia, a government can assume such vetting powers “mid-flight”, i.e. after a deal has been signed, but before it has closed.

    The EU framework will not ask Member States to create national FDI screening mechanisms, but history and logic suggests that proliferation of such national regimes will follow regardless. Consequently, we – M&A advisers in CEE – can’t afford to be spectators. Instead, we should actively engage with governments to make sure that local FDI screening regimes (if any) are well-targeted, non-discriminatory, and transparent, and that they avoid unintended overreach or deliberate abuse (e.g., to protect national champions). We must share experiences to anticipate regulatory issues, speak out on bottlenecks to alert authorities to scale-up on resources, and so on.

    Doing so will prevent clogging the CEE deal pipeline with unintended hurdles and enhance our ability to anticipate and overcome, in a timely and efficient manner, the ones that remain.

    Importantly, it will increase our relevance as agile and valuable advisers in the engine rooms of Europe; not merely substitutable tools in a wider and polarizing market for legal services.

    By Rene Frolov, Partner, Fort Legal Estonia

    This Article was originally published in Issue 5.12 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.

  • Triniti Advises Owners of Utilitas on Sale of Majority Stake to EDIF II

    Triniti Advises Owners of Utilitas on Sale of Majority Stake to EDIF II

    Triniti has advised the owners of OU Utilitas on the acquisition of an 85% shareholding of the company by investment fund EDIF II.

    According to Triniti, “Utilitas is a leading privately held Estonian energy company with two combined heat and power plants in Tallinn and distance heating networks in eight cities in Estonia. The company supplies heat to 166,000 households in Estonia.”

    EDIF II is an investment fund based in London that specializes in investments in energy, transport and infrastructure with a total volume of over 2.1 billion euros. Utilitas constitutes the first investment in the Baltic states for EDIF II. In addition to the fund investors, the transaction was financed by a syndicate pf Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken, Credit Agricole, and HSH Nordbank.

    “By engaging this foreign investor, Utilitas will have new opportunities in sector where it is already the market leader in Estonia,” explained Triniti Partner Ergo Blumfeldt, who led the firm’s team on the deal. “The investment by EDIF II is another quality mark for Estonia which indicates how attractive our country and also the renewable energy sector appears to be.”

    Triniti did not reply to our inquiries about the deal.

  • KPMG Law Adds Partners from TGS Baltic and Eversheds Sutherland in Estonia

    KPMG Law Adds Partners from TGS Baltic and Eversheds Sutherland in Estonia

    Former TGS Baltic Counsel Kristina Laarmaa has joined KPMG Law in Estonia as Head of Public Procurement, Construction, Real Estate & Environment and Lauri Liivat has joined as Head of the firm’s Corporate Transactions and Technology Sector Group.

    KPMG Law reports that the firm increased its turnover by 70 percent last year, a figure it aims to sustain. According to the firm, “hence the need for additional partners.”

    Kristina Laarmaa began her career in 2002 as a lawyer at Paul Varul Attorneys-at-Law, and in 2007 joined Lawin (now Cobalt, in Estonia). In 2009 she moved to what is now TGS Baltic, where she eventually became Head of Public Procurement. According to KPMG Law, “Kristina is among the leading public procurement experts and has unrivaled experience in the IT, waste management, and public transport sectors. She has advised numerous clients on projects financed by the EU structural funds.”

    “Joining KPMG and sharing my public procurement, construction and litigation experience will be an exciting challenge for me,” said Laarmaa.

    Lauri Liivat started his career at KPMG as a Tax Advisor back in 2002, and in 2004 he moved to Swedbank. In 2007 he joined Eversheds (now Eversheds Sutherland Ots & Co) in Tallinn, where he stayed until this move. According to KPMG Law, “during more than ten years he advised clients in over two hundred transactions in the field of M&A and corporate law.” The firm reports that he “has experience in both international and local transactions and has advised not only real estate and technology companies but also start-ups.”

    “At KPMG, my primary focus will be on the technology sector and developing KPMG’s M&A practice,” stated Liivat.

    “We have attracted two top experts, who will strengthen the team with additional competencies, new synergy, additional practice areas, and management resources,” said Risto Agur, Managing Partner at KPMG Law. “It’s no secret that we are taking on new partners because KPMG Law is growing rapidly. This has created the need for increasing the team and expanding the range of services offered.”

    Karin Kaup, Partner and Head of Corporate, M&A and Employment & Immigration at KPMG Law, welcomed the new partners: “With two more leading experts on our successful team, we can increase our focus on the key sectors. By knowing the sector and its main players, we can provide our clients with even more comprehensive service in business, financial and legal matters.”

    With Laarmaa and Liivat, KPMG Law now has four partners in Estonia, five heads of practice areas, and 13 attorneys and lawyers.

  • Cobalt Advises EIB on EUR 12 Miillion Loan to Elcogen

    Cobalt Advises EIB on EUR 12 Miillion Loan to Elcogen

    Cobalt has advised the European Investment Bank on a EUR 12 million quasi-equity loan it provided to Estonian company Elcogen.

    According to Cobalt, Elcogen is the first company in the Baltic countries to get support under the InnovFin, an EU-finance program for innovators. The financing falls under InnovFin’s Energy Demonstration Projects facility. With the support, Elcogen expects to grow into the world’s leading fuel cells producer in three years.

    Elcogen, founded in 2001, is an Estonian manufacturer of the next-generation fuel cells – a new generation of clean energy generation technology that makes it possible to generate electricity without the need for internal combustion. 

    InnovFin Energy Demonstration Projects provides loans, loan guarantees, and equity-type financing typically between EUR 7.5 million and EUR 75 million to innovative demonstration projects in the fields of energy system transformation, including renewable energy technologies, smart energy systems, energy storage, carbon capture and storage/use, hydrogen and fuel cells, helping them to bridge the gap from demonstration to commercialization. 

    The Cobalt team consisted of Partners Kristel Raidla-Talur and Marina Kotkas and Senior Associates Greete-Kristiine Kuru and Karl Kull.

    Cobalt did not reply to our inquires about the deal.

  • Nove Successful for Sebe AS in Public Procurement Dispute

    Nove Successful for Sebe AS in Public Procurement Dispute

    Nove has successfully represented Estonian bus transport service provider AS SEBE in a dispute regarding a public service contract worth more than 21 million euros.

    According to Nove, “the tender of AS SEBE was declared successful among six competitors, [while] two tenders with the lowest price were rejected for offering a smaller number of buses for provision of the service than required in the tender documents. The rejected bidders challenged the decisions, claiming that the tender documents did not contain such requirements and their tenders complied with the conditions. The essence of the dispute concerned both the principles of interpretation of tender documents as well as verification of tenders’ compliance. The challenges were dismissed in the procurement review committee and in two consecutive instances of court. The Supreme Court finally refused to open proceedings in relation to the decision of the circuit court in December 2018. As of now AS SEBE has concluded the public contract of EUR 21,108,180.”

    The Nove team consisted of Partner Veikko Puolakainen and Attorney-at-Law Veiko Vaske.

  • Cobalt Advises Scope on Estonian Aspects of Lingerie Brand Acquisition

    Cobalt Advises Scope on Estonian Aspects of Lingerie Brand Acquisition

    Cobalt has advised the Jersey-based fund Scope Growth III L.P. on Estonian aspects of its acquisition of the lingerie brand Miss Mary of Sweden.

    “Miss Mary offers world-class quality lingerie,” according to Cobalt, which goes on to explain that “the company differs from other lingerie manufacturers by keeping the entire product life-cycle inside the company. The company was founded in 1957 in Boras, Sweden, where the design team, atelier and sample sewing department are located to this day. The products are primarily manufactured in Tallinn, Estonia.”

    According to Cobalt, “the Scope Funds invest in Nordic growth opportunities, partnering with organizations with a proven value added and a differentiated value proposition to create sustainable, growing companies. Scope manages two funds with a combined capital of 200 million euros.”

    The Cobalt team was led by Partners Martin Simovart and Marina Kotkas, Specialist Counsel Jesse Kivisaari, and Senior Associates Heleri Tammiste and Mattias Tammeaid.