Abstract

In cross-border mergers, creditor protection is important to facilitate a smooth, efficient and transparent process necessary to facilitate the single market. As all assets and liabilities are being transferred and there is a risk that the liabilities of the acquiring company will exceed the assets, creditor protection needs to be safeguarded in legal mergers. As the title suggests, creditor protection in the context of cross-border mergers and the recently adopted directive is examined in this paper, as well as the position of creditors under Dutch law and the Third Directive. The ex-ante and ex-post systems of creditor protection, both existing in the Member States of the EU, and which are both supported by strong arguments, are also discussed. The fact that differences in creditor protection rules nevertheless remain may create unjustifiable differences in the position of various groups of creditors involved in one single cross-border merger. The authors conclude that the case for leaving creditor protection to the Member States is weakening. Differences in national legislation on creditor protection, defendable as they may be, are ultimately of a technical nature and create unnecessary and unjustifiable impediments. There are strong arguments, in other words, to adopt the same provisions for all transactions for the sake of simplicity, but while this may be attractive, it can lead to undesired delay. Amending the Directive at this point in time thus seems equally unfeasible. This stresses the need to make haste with at least some further harmonization of creditor protection rules related to the Third Directive.

Highlights

  • The purpose of the Directive on cross-border mergers[1] is facilitating cooperation and consolidation between limited liability companies from different Member States in the European Union by taking away legislative and administrative difficulties they encounter when executing a crossborder merger

  • In view of the completion and functioning of the single market, the Directive lays down provisions to facilitate such mergers and, considering the famous Sevic judgement,[2] such provisions are welcome in Europe

  • The first steps go back to 1965 when a committee was installed to draft a treaty on international mergers by public companies.[3]

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Summary

Introduction

The purpose of the Directive on cross-border mergers[1] is facilitating cooperation and consolidation between limited liability companies from different Member States in the European Union by taking away legislative and administrative difficulties they encounter when executing a crossborder merger. The solutions reached on that front may be debatable,[4] but in any case some provisions to that effect have been adopted in the final text of the Directive. This is barely the case for creditor protection. The question is whether creditor protection can best be left to the Member States. Before addressing this question, we will in this article first describe the current position on creditor protection in national mergers in the Netherlands and subsequently go into specific crossborder issues concerning creditor protection in legal mergers

The position of creditors under current Dutch law
The Dutch implementation of the Directive
Specific cross-border issues
Findings
Future ambitions and unfinished business
Full Text
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