Category: Lithuania

  • ADON Legal Advises Protean Risk Limited on Adaptation of PSD Bond in Lithuania

    ADON Legal Advises Protean Risk Limited on Adaptation of PSD Bond in Lithuania

    Lithuania’s ADON Legal has advised Protean Risk Limited, a registered broker at Lloyds, on the adaptation of a PSD Bond to Lithuanian law and its coordination with the Bank of Lithuania.

    The PSD Bond is an insurance product for the safeguarding of clients’ funds of electronic money institutions and payment institutions.

    “We consider the introduction of the PSD Bond to be an important development for Lithuanian EMIs and PIs giving additional means to meeting the regulatory expectations and optimization of the use of own capital,” ADON Adon Legal Founding Partner Donatas Sliora, who led the firm’s team on the deal.

  • Glimstedt and TGS Baltic Advise on Precia Molen’s Acquisition of Milviteka

    Glimstedt and TGS Baltic Advise on Precia Molen’s Acquisition of Milviteka

    Glimstedt has advised Precia Molen on the acquisition of 100% of Milviteka UAB from its shareholders, who were advised by TGS Baltic.

    Precia Molen, located in the Ardeche region of France, designs, manufactures, and sells weighing instruments. Milviteka UAB, based in Gargzdai, Lithuania, designs and manufactures bulk material handling equipment.

    The Glimstedt team included Partner Ausra Maliauskaite-Embrekte, Senior Associates Jurgita Zakarauskiene and Arturas Tukleris, Associate Laura Tunkeviciute, Junior Associate Simona Butkute, and Expert Giedre Rimkunaite-Manke.

    The TGS Baltic team included Partner Dalia Tamasauskaite-Ziliene and Associate Julija Skardziute.

  • Sorainen, TGS Baltic, and Dentons advise on Avia Solutions Group Bond Issuance

    Sorainen, TGS Baltic, and Dentons advise on Avia Solutions Group Bond Issuance

    Sorainen has helped JP Morgan and BNP Paribas organize a five-year bond issue with a total value of USD 300 million for Avia Solutions Group – a Lithuanian aviation services group ‒ at an annual interest rate of 7.875% and a maturity date of 2024. The bonds were issued in US dollars and distributed in the US and European markets. The Avia group was advised by TGS Baltic and Dentons.

    According to Sorainen, “the bond proceeds will be used for further business development: purchase and rental of aircraft, purchase, and dismantling of aircraft engines, purchase of flight simulators.”

    The Sorainen team included Partner Tomas Kontautas, Senior Associates Dalia Augaite and Rasa Mikutiene, and Associate Rimantas Bendorius.

    The TGS Baltic team included Partner Vidmantas Drizga, Associate Partner Mantas Gofmanas, and Junior Associate Goda Drasute.

    Dentons’s London-based team included Partners Cameron Half and Nick Hayday, Senior Associate Nicholas Yao, Associates Nicolo Ascione, Moeen Qayum, Emma Brown, Kal Masia, and Rachel Gibbs, and Trainee Shinae Lee.

    Editor’s Note: After this article was published CEE Legal Matters learned that Magnusson advised the Avia Solutions Group on Latvian and Estonian elements of the deal and that White & Case worked alongside Sorainen in advising joint lead managers JP Morgan and BNP Paribas.

    Magnusson’s team providing advice on Estonian matters included Senior Counsel Toomas Malberg, Lawyer Jaanus Magi, Senior Associate Mirjam Vosu, and Associates Mait Valberg, Ketlin Peterson, Hanna Esko, and Jekaterina Iljina. The firm’s team on Latvian matters included Partner Matiss Rostoks, Attorney Gints Puskundzis, Senior Associate Anna Bogdanova, and Assistants Beatrise Bensone and Beate Buza.

  • Separated Tvins in Lithuania

    Separated Tvins in Lithuania

    After five and a half years, Lithuanian lawyers Vytautas Senavicius and Tomas Talutis have dissolved their Tvins law firm partnership and concluded the operations of the firm.

    Vytautas Senavicius has taken 12 of the former Tvins lawyers and opened the new Senavicius and Partners Response law firm. Senavicius is Managing Partner and head of Banking & Finance at Response, while Partners Rytis Martinkėnas and Stanislav Papijanc are co-heads of Litigation. Associate Partner Tadas Lukosius will practice in Corporate Law (including Data Protection) and Banking/Finance.

  • Fort Advises Eika Real Estate Fund on Acquisition of Vilnius Business Center

    Fort Advises Eika Real Estate Fund on Acquisition of Vilnius Business Center

    Fort Legal has advised Eika Real Estate Fund on its acquisition of Vilnius’s Highway business center — an A+ class building with total leasable space of 5700 square meters.

    Fort Legal’s Lithuanian team consisted of Managing Partner Andrius Mamontovas and Associate Paulius Uosis.

    Fort did not reply to our inquiry on the matter.

  • Orrick and Taylor Wessing Advise on Sprint Capital’s Investment in Vinted

    Orrick and Taylor Wessing Advise on Sprint Capital’s Investment in Vinted

    Orrick has advised Sprint Capital on its investment in Vinted, a website marketplace for second-hand fashion. The entire investment round has a total value of EUR 128 million, with other backers including Lightspeed Venture Partners, Insight Venture Partners, Accel, and Burda Principal Investments. Taylor Wessing and Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati advised Vinted and Cooley reportedly advised Lightspeed Venture Partners on the deal.

    This investment puts the valuation of the Lithuania-based startups at over USD 1 billion. Vinted currently has around 180 million products on its platform, along with 25 million registered users.

    The Orrick team included Partner Shawn Atkinson, Managing Associate Alex Gest, Associate Charles Baker, and Trainee Solicitor Chloe Palios.

    The Taylor Wessing team included Partners Angus Miln, Vinod Bange, Ann Casey, Adam Rendle, Paul Callaghan, Charlotte Hill, and Sian Skelton, Senior Counsel Elaine Fletcher, Senior Associates Jean-David Behlow and James Watkins, Associates Victor Chang, Katie Fry-Paul, Sam Holdsworth, Alice Anderson, and Matthew Ives, and Paralegals Jess Nobes and Marianna Vla.

    The Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati team was led by Partner Stacy Kim and Associate Amanda Pollard.

  • Walless Helps PayRay Obtain Banking License from Bank of Lithuania and European Central Bank

    Walless Helps PayRay Obtain Banking License from Bank of Lithuania and European Central Bank

    Walless has helped PayRay, a capital financing company based in Lithuania, obtain a full banking license from the Bank of Lithuania and the ECB.

    According to Walless, “this is the first full banking license issued in Lithuania after more than a decade. This license will allow PayRay accepting deposits and diversifying its funding sources for the SME financing business.”

    The Walless team included Partners Joana Baublyte Kulviete and Mindaugas Lukas, Associate Partner Lina Radvaviciene, and Senior Associate Simona Kisunaite.

  • Cobalt Advises Corum Origin on Acquisition of Depo Store in Kaunas

    Cobalt Advises Corum Origin on Acquisition of Depo Store in Kaunas

    Cobalt has advised French real estate investment fund Corum on the acquisition of 22,000 square meter large Depo DIY store in Kaunas.

    The store is located on one of the major highway junctions in Kaunas and received one of the first  A+ certificates for building energy efficiency for its type of building. 

    Cobalt’s team was consisted of Partner Simona Oliskeviciute-Ciceniene, Managing Associate Ausrys Sliavas and Associate Liucija Bitinaite.

    Cobalt did not reply to our inquiry on the matter.

  • Lithuania Lighted Up on the Map of FinTech World: What’s Next?

    Lithuania Lighted Up on the Map of FinTech World: What’s Next?

    Amazingly, the Lithuanian FinTech ecosystem report of 2018 revealed that there were 170 FinTech companies based in Lithuania – reflecting 45 percent growth over the previous year – with some 2,600 employees working in FinTech companies, more than 700 of which were newly-employed in 2018. The numbers are still growing this year.

    Nevertheless, FinTech companies in Lithuania may face considerable challenges in the years to come, including stricter oversight by the Bank of Lithuania, the growing need for qualified specialists, and difficulties in communicating with credit institutions.

    Supervision of Licensed FinTech Companies is Tightening

    Recently-adopted amendments to the Law on the Bank of Lithuania have tightened the bank’s supervision of financial institutions and increased the fines and liability for non-compliance with the law, while issues of risk management are regularly raised at the inter-institutional level.

    Following the entry into force of the new version of the Board of Bank of Lithuania’s Resolution on the Preparation and Submission of Reports, the amount of information that FinTech companies are required to provide has increased significantly. To meet these requirements, FinTech companies need to hire and train additional staff and appropriately redesign existing IT systems. For FinTech companies with 10 to 15 employees, therefore, these requirements impose a quite heavy administrative burden.

    Thus, companies licensed by the Bank of Lithuania cannot lay back: they must constantly update their internal procedures, assess internal and external risk factors, and apply state-of-the-art risk management measures. It is significant that highly trained and qualified employees are needed to properly manage internal processes and meet increased requirements. 

    Difficulties for FinTech Companies in Collaborating with Credit Institutions

    One of the main problems that FinTech companies face is the refusal of banks to allow them to open accounts. The main options to safeguard client funds include: (i) holding or separating funds from those of other natural or legal persons; (ii) insuring the funds; or (iii) obtaining a letter of guarantee or warranty issued by an insurance company or credit institution of the Republic of Lithuania (including a branch of a foreign insurance company or credit institution established in the Republic of Lithuania) or another EU Member State. FinTech companies may invest these client funds in safe, liquid, and low-risk assets as determined by the supervisory authority.

    As the market for investing such funds is currently unfavorable, FinTech companies typically opt to safeguard the funds in a separate account with the central bank or ensuring the funds – although this latter approach is less popular due to the limited supply of insurance products and high fees. However, FinTech companies often face an unfavorable attitude from the banks when they apply to open a customer funds account or issue a guarantee. 

    This cautious position of the banks may be due to their unwillingness to take risks for the relatively small return these accounts generate. Usually banks attribute higher risk to FinTech companies due to uncertainty about the origin of funds held in such separate accounts, the companies’ shareholder structures, internal procedures, etc. In addition, the evaluation process required for FinTech companies requires additional resources from the banks. For all of these reasons, banks often refuse to open an account for a FinTech company.

    However, the supervisory authority now possesses a tool to deal with this situation. Following the entry into force of the new wording of the Law on Payments, a credit institution refusing to open a payment account for payment institution or an electronic money institution must immediately notify the supervisory authority and declare the reasons for its refusal. This allows the authority to monitor whether the reasons for refusal are well founded and whether the decision is based on the principles of objectivity, non-discrimination, and proportionality. Unfortunately, in practice, such notifications are rarely sent to the supervisory authority.

    How can FinTech companies run more smoothly? The solution would be if there were more alternative and realistic options in the market of safeguarding customers’ funds, such as new insurance products or investing in other directions that provide investment return.

    Eva Suduiko, Associate Partner, and Justina Milasauskiene, Senior Associate, Cobalt

    This Article was originally published in Issue 6.9 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.

  • TGS Baltic Appointed Legal Advisor on Apartment Building Modernization

    TGS Baltic Appointed Legal Advisor on Apartment Building Modernization

    TGS Baltic has been selected as legal advisor to the European Investment Bank on Lithuania’s multi-apartment building modernization. The agreement between the EIB and TGS Baltic was signed for a period of two years.

    According to TGS Baltic, “the EIB and TGS Baltic have been cooperating on issues of sustainable investments into urban territories for over a decade – from the time when the EIB started the implementation of the JESSICA I program in Lithuania in 2009. Later, in 2017, the law firm was advising on implementation of the Jessica II Fund of Funds financial engineering instruments and creation of the Leveraged Fund under this fund for energy efficiency increasing projects.”

    Since the beginning of the modernization project, financing from EU structural funds was used to renovate 2,348 multi-apartment houses in Lithuania.