By Kyriaki Stinga and Emilios Charalambous
The year 2023 marked 30 years since the establishment of the European Single Market and the introduction of the four fundamental freedoms of movement it embodies: freedom of goods, capital, services and people. These freedoms have revolutionised our understanding of borders in the Western world, enhancing European values of unification and harmonisation in our daily lives.
Keeping to the theme, Directive (EU) 2017/1132 consolidated a significant portion of European Union company law rules into a single directive that covers issues like the formation of companies, capital and disclosure requirements, and their operational procedures.
As economic progress continued unabated, the need for healthy and flourishing companies that could promote economic growth and attract further investments into the EU increased. In response, Directive (EU) 2019/2121 of the European Parliament and of the Council of November 27, 2019, amended Directive (EU) 2017/1132 to address cross-border conversions, mergers and divisions. This Directive, as an extension or facilitator of the freedom of establishment and considered the ‘fifth freedom’, enhances the mobility of companies within the internal market. It enables them to reorganise their operations across borders more easily while maintaining their legal identity and perhaps include a functional aspect of corporate freedom of movement alongside the existing four freedoms.
According to the explanatory memorandum of the European Commission:
‘…companies need to operate in a legal and administrative environment which is both conducive to growth and adapted to face the new economic and social challenges of a globalised and digital world.’
The Directive outlines several key provisions:
The Directive represents a significant step towards facilitating cross-border business activities within the EU while ensuring robust legal frameworks and protections for all stakeholders involved. By harmonising rules and procedures across member states, the Directive aims to promote economic growth, competitiveness, and stability within the European single market.
The implementation of the Directive in Cyprus is likely to have several notable impacts on the country’s business environment, corporate governance landscape, and legal framework:
Under the existing Companies Law, CAP 113, the matter of cross-border mergers is properly regulated in line with the provisions of Directive (EU) 2017/1132 in sections 201Θ to 201ΚΖ of the Companies Law. The issue of transfer of seat/migration of a company from or to Cyprus is regulated in sections 354A to 354IH of the Companies Law provided that the laws of the other country (incorporation or hosting jurisdiction) permit it.
The cross-border division provisions, as introduced by the Directive, represent a significant breakthrough for the Cyprus legal corporate system seeing as the Companies Law only addresses local divisions/demergers in the context of ‘reorganisations’, which lacks the cross-border element necessary for international restructurings and flexibility for corporations.
Overall, the implementation of the Directive in Cyprus is expected to bring both opportunities and challenges for the country’s business community. Upon transposition of the Directive into local legislation, Cypriot companies can better position themselves to capitalise on the benefits of increased cross-border integration within the European single market.
Kyriaki Stinga is a senior associate and Emilios Charalambous an associate at Elias Neocleous & Co LLC