Merger filling requirement arising from enforcement of security over shares or capital contribution under Vietnamese Competition Law

Under Competition Law 2018, in general, any economic concentration transaction (i.e., any M&A transaction) triggering the filing thresholds prescribed in Decree 35/2020 must be notified to National Competition Committee (NCC). Accordingly, enforcement of security over shares or capital contribution by a lender, which result in a change of control of the borrower, may be considered as an economic concentration and subject to merger filing requirements under Competition Law 2018. This could pose a serious timing problem for the lender (e.g., a Vietnamese bank or a foreign lender) (the secured creditors) in enforcing mortgaged/pledged shares or capital contribution in practice.

Some New Key Points of The New Vietnam Investment Law 2020

The National Assembly of Vietnam passed a new Investment Law on 17 June 2020 which will become effective on 1 January 2021 (LOI 2020) and replace the current Investment Law 2014 (LOI 2014). In this briefing, we briefly discuss some new key points of LOI 2020.

This briefing is written by Ha Thi Dung and edited by Nguyen Quang Vu with the research assistance of Tran Kim Chi.

Please download our write up here.

Internal restructuring and merger filing in Vietnam

The Competition Law 2018 does not exempt internal restructuring within the same group of companies from merger filing requirements. That said, arguably, internal restructuring between companies which are under the control of the same ultimate parent company is not subject to merger filing in Vietnam. This is because:

  • Under the competition law, the market share of a company is calculated by reference to the market share of the group of companies that such a company belongs to (the Group). Therefore, an internal restructuring does not have any impact on the market share of the Group and accordingly any anti-competitive impact on the market. Relying on Article 1 of the Competition Law 2018 which provides for the scope of application of the Competition Law 2018, one could argue that an internal restructuring transaction is not governed by the Competition Law 2018;

Potential structures for overcoming a merger filing threshold in Vietnam

The merger filing thresholds under the new Decree 35/2020 are drafted broadly and have no exception (see more here). Accordingly, many M&A transactions, which have no anti-competitive impact in Vietnam are still subject to filing requirements. A filing process could take substantial time and effort since at law and in practice, the competition authority (NCC) has very broad discretion in demanding additional information or documents about the parties. Below are some potential structures for overcoming the merger filing threshold in Vietnam. The risks associated with these structures is that Vietnamese authorities may take the view that the parties have undertaken a transaction to conceal another transaction and therefore the first transaction is not valid. Failure to notify the NCC may be subject to a penalty from 1% to 5% of the total revenue in Vietnam of the parties.

Unincorporated joint venture

For a joint venture transaction, instead of incorporating a new joint venture company, the parties may consider entering into an unincorporated joint venture where no new entity is established (e.g., a Production Sharing Contract). An unincorporated joint venture does not fall into the types of economic concentration that is subject to merger filing in Vietnam. This is because the Competition Law 2018 only expressly applies to incorporated joint ventures but not unincorporated joint ventures.