Category: Lithuania

  • Sorainen Advises Atsinaujinancios Energetikos Investicijos on EUR 10 Million Bond Issuance

    Sorainen has advised Lords LB-managed Atsinaujinancios Energetikos Investicijos on a second four-year green bond issuance. Luminor Bank was the main distributor of the EUR 10 million issuance.

    According to Sorainen, “this is the second placement of Atsinaujinancios Energetikos Investicijos under the EUR 100 million bond program … Under the terms of the issue, the funds received will be used in accordance with Atsinaujinancios Energetikos Investicijos’ public Green Bond Framework. Investments will be mainly used for solar and wind energy projects in the Baltics and Poland.” A total of EUR 35 million in bonds issued to date will be listed on the Nasdaq Vilnius stock exchange on July 20, 2022.

    Last year, Sorainen advised Atsinaujinancios Energetikos Investicijos on the first – EUR 25 million – green bond issuance (as reported by CEE Legal Matters on December 17, 2021).

    Sorainen’s team included Partner Augustas Klezys, Senior Associate Dalia Augaite, and Associate Egle Martinaityte.

  • Jovita Valatkaite Appointed Head of Employement at Cobalt

    Managing Associate Jovita Valatkaite has been appointed as the Head of the Employment Law practice group in Cobalt’s Lithuanian office.

    According to Cobalt, Valatkaite has over 12 years of “extensive experience of legal practice in the fields of employment and migration law.”

    Valatkaite has been with Cobalt since 2016, first joining as an Associate Lawyer, being promoted to Senior Associate in 2018, and then to Managing Associate in 2022. Before joining Cobalt, she spent almost two years with Gencs Valters as a Lawyer, from 2014 to 2016. Prior to that, Valatkaite spent almost a year with SKV Law as an Associate Lawyer, over a year in-house with Lietuvos Pastas and, earlier still, over two years with Magnusson Law as a Lawyer.

  • Walless Advises Reverest on Obtaining Management License from Bank of Lithuania

    Walless has provided legal support to Reverest Asset Management on receiving the authorization to operate as a management company for collective investment undertakings for informed investors from the Bank of Lithuania.

    According to Walless, “the authorization will allow Reverest Fund Management to scale its activities of value-added real estate investments in the Baltic states by offering the best options for eligible private investors, family offices, and institutional capital.”

    Reverest Fund Management is a Lithuanian company that specializes in real estate development, financial & transaction structuring, and asset management.

    The Walless team included Associate Partner Laurynas Narvydas and Associate Viktorija Dusajeva.

  • TGS Baltic Advises Valstybes Investicinis Kapitalas on EUR 25 Million Note Issuance

    TGS Baltic has advised Valstybes Investicinis Kapitalas on a EUR 25 million note issuance. Luminor Bank was the sole manager and bookrunner.

    Valstybes Investicinis Kapitalas assists medium-sized and large enterprises operating in Lithuania affected by the COVID-19 outbreak by operating a fund, created by the Republic of Lithuania, consisting of a government contribution and possible contributions from international institutions and private investors.

    According to TGS Baltic, the issuance of the five-year senior unsecured notes has been done under the existing EUR 400 million program of Valstybes Investicinis Kapitalas. The notes have a nominal value of EUR 1,000 and a yield of 2.826%. “Proceeds from the subsequent notes will be used to provide additional capital to the Aid Fund for Business, which is managed by the State Investment Management Agency. The transaction took place under the private placement regime and was subscribed by Baltic institutional investors.”

    According to the firm, Valstybes Investicinis Kapitalas will apply for the notes to be admitted for trading on Nasdaq Vilnius.

    Last year, TGS Baltic advised Valstybes Investicinis Kapitalas on the same note program and a related EUR 30 million issuance (as reported by CEE Legal Matters on September 24, 2021).

    TGS Baltic’s team included Partner Vidmantas Drizga, Senior Associates Karolina Lapinskaite and Tadas Varapnickas, and Associate Kotryna Visockyte.

  • Motieka & Audzevicius Successful for ICOR Group in Dispute with Republic of Lithuania

    Motieka & Audzevicius has successfully defended Veolia’s Lithuanian partner ICOR Group and other Lithuanian respondents, before Court of Appeal, from a EUR 240 million claim filed by the Republic of Lithuania.

    According to Motieka & Audzevicius, “On February 14, 2022, the Vilnius regional court ruled that Lithuania’s counterclaims against French investors and Lithuanian companies and natural persons, which were originally raised in ICSID arbitration, were not admissible. In addition, the Court held that even if they were admissible, Lithuanian courts do not have jurisdiction to examine such claims. Therefore, Lithuania’s counterclaims should be brought to the French courts where the French investors are domiciled.”

    After the appeal by the government, Motieka & Audzevicius convinced the Court of Appeal that the government’s appeal was ungrounded and, according to the firm, “on June 28, 2022, the Court of Appeal rejected the government’s appeal.”

    The Motieka & Audzevicius team included Partners Rimantas Daujotas and Ramunas Audzevicius, Counsel Denis Parchajev, Senior Associate Henrikas Stelmokaitis, and Associate Dmitrij Maciugin.

  • Sorainen Advises Farfetch on Acquisition of Wannaby

    Sorainen has advised fashion retail platform Farfetch on its acquisition of augmented reality startup Wannaby. The transaction closed in April 2022.

    Farfetch was established in 2007 in Portugal, and currently connects customers in over 190 countries with goods from over 1,400 brands.

    Wannaby is an augmented reality startup that has developed technology that allows users to virtually try on shoes, clothes, accessories, and cosmetics.

    Sorainen’s team included Partners Maksim Salahub, Sergej Butov, and Evaldas Dudonis, Senior Associate Aurelija Daubaraite, and Associates Yuliya Sushchanka, Anastasiya Smirnova, and Ana Surpickaja.

    Sorainen did not respond to our inquiry on the matter.

  • Motieka & Audzevicius Advises Orion Fund on Private Bond Investment in Germany

    Motieka & Audzevicius, working with Osborne Clarke, has advised the Orion Private Equity Debt Fund I on the EUR 7 million acquisition of secured mezzanine bonds issued by Austrian real estate developer Soini Asset to finance its real estate projects in Germany. Fieldfisher reportedly advised Soini Asset.

    The Orion Private Debt Fund I is a Lithuanian-based private debt fund. Soini Asset is a real estate investment manager in Austria.

    “To our knowledge, this is the biggest Lithuanian private debt fund transaction in the history of Lithuania and probably the first time when a Lithuanian fund has a direct investment in Germany,” Orion Asset Management Board member Benas Poderis commented. “At the moment, Soini Asset is developing projects of more than EUR 175 million in value, such as the 60,000 square-meter Galileo and 20,000 square-meter Asto Maender near Munich, Germany, and logistics centers in Linz, Graz, and Vienna, in Austria.”

    The Motieka & Audzevicius team included Partner Giedrius Kolesnikovas and Senior Associates Aivaras Grigas and Sigita Zavisiene.

    The Osborne Clarke team was led by Germany-based Counsel Olexiy Oleshchuk and included Partners Heiko Petzold and Phillip Reeb, Senior Associate Theresa Viegener, and Associates Charlotte Mager and Julian Heyermann.

  • The Buzz in Lithuania: Interview with Elijus Burgis of Cobalt

    Stable markets and an increase in start-up and tech sector professionals are looking good for Lithuania right now, but there are some standing hurdles within competition regulations that could stifle the free movement and growth of business, according to Cobalt Partner Elijus Burgis.

    “The initial shock that followed the beginning of the war dissipated shortly and the legal markets, as well as the business sectors, reversed their slowdowns quickly,” Burgis begins. “Transactions, being the first to feel any and all negative sentiments in the market – leading to deals being suspended or aborted – did not suffer in Lithuania at all, at least not yet.” 

    Speaking of surprising market developments as a consequence of the global crisis, Burgis points to the startup sector. “We see the consequences of layoffs in the US and Europe spilling over into Lithuania – but with a positive twist,” he says. “While the markets are going down elsewhere, Lithuanian companies see this as an opportunity to scoop up talent.” According to him, Lithuanian startups have a “strong presence abroad” making it easier for them to “attract new people as fresh talent is freeing up.” Moreover, he indicates that there are “people attracted to Lithuania also from Ukraine as well as Belarus and Russia – and this could very well continue.” 

    Even the “ever-challenging construction sector – that is heavily impacted by international supply chain disruptions – is performing well in Lithuania,” Burgis says. While the costs have surged, it has not been “prohibitive in any way. In fact, most of the construction projects in Vilnius are on track for timely completion.”

    Having all of this in mind, Burgis stresses that there is no downturn. “There is no uptick in litigation, which would always be a consequence of any external shocks to the transaction market, no matter how short they last,” he explains. “Neither have we seen any surge in bankruptcies, insolvencies, or restructurings, at least for now, which only further points to things being stable.”

    Speaking more about legal updates, Burgis does indicate that “competition and antitrust clearance procedures are still very much affecting transactions. More transactions are being either limited or rejected by the competition authorities.” He says that the markets are “quite consolidated,” which leads to the authority being “very strict. However, it’s the issue with regulations – sometimes they aren’t adequately tailored to take the wider markets into account.” Burgis explains that this is a significant issue, because “Lithuania is a small market and being a dominant player here is not the same as being a dominant player on the European market as a whole – the competition authority should start taking that into account.” 

    Finally, Burgis says that what remains a big challenge is geopolitics. “The entire regional tension is creating certain limits leading to some investors employing a wait-and-see approach, especially those that are based in faraway jurisdictions.” He feels that “Lithuania’s major challenge, right now, is to succeed in projecting an image of our reality of stability and safety, in order to stave off any fears.”

  • Sorainen Successful for Zalgiris Before Vilnius Court

    Sorainen has successfully represented basketball club Zalgiris in a case against the Lithuanian Competition Council before the Vilnius Regional Administrative Court.

    According to Sorainen, “the Competition Council fined the Lithuanian Basketball League and ten of its clubs for an alleged anti-competitive agreement according to which they allegedly decided not to pay salaries or other compensation to their basketball players for the prematurely interrupted season. The 2019–2020 season was interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. An investigation into a possible breach of the Law on Competition and TFEU started in April 2020, after information appeared in public about the discussion between the league and the basketball clubs during the extraordinary board meeting.”

    According to the firm, “the court ruled that the Competition Council had not proved that such an agreement had been reached at all, or that internal discussions between the league’s clubs on how to act during the pandemic were forbidden. Therefore, the imposed fines were annulled. The highest of any of the fines for the clubs reached EUR 16,510 and was imposed on Zalgiris. Furthermore, had the court affirmed the conclusions of the Competition Council, the general manager could have been disqualified for three to five years.”

    “We are pleased with the court’s decision,” commented Zalgiris Director Paulius Motiejunas. “Zalgiris has been negotiating with the Euroleague Players’ Association since the beginning of the pandemic and has paid the players’ salaries. Zalgiris did not participate in any agreements with other Lithuanian Basketball League clubs on the payment of salaries. Therefore, the position of the Competition Council always seemed unreasonable to us.”

    Sorainen’s team included Partners Daivis Svirinas and Monika Malisauskaite-Vaupsiene and Associate Auridas Litvinas.

  • TGS Baltic Advises Epso-G on EUR 75 Million Sustainability-Linked Issuance

    TGS Baltic has advised Lithuanian state-owned energy transmission and exchange group Epso-G on its EUR 75 million issuance of five-year sustainability-linked bonds.

    According to TGS Baltic, “the project is significant for the entire Baltic capital market, as the interest rate of the bonds was the first linked to compliance with ESG requirements. The five-year bond issue with a 3.117% yield raised EUR 75 million. The bonds have been acquired by institutional investors from Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, and Sweden. Almost one-third of the amount came from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.”

    TGS Baltic’s team included Partner Vidmantas Drizga, Senior Associate Karolina Lapinskaite, and Junior Associate Kotryna Visockyte.

    TGS Baltic did not respond to our inquiry on the matter.