A Vietnamese company which satisfies public company requirements but which has not registered its public company status with the State Securities Commission (SSC) may arguably not need to comply with various obligations of a public company under Vietnamese law.
Under the Securities Law 2019, a public company is a joint stock company that satisfies the following conditions (the Required Conditions):
· having a minimum paid-up charter capital of 30 billion dongs, and
· having at least 10% of the voting shares held by at least 100 investors not being major shareholders.
The Securities Law 2019 also provides that:
· a company satisfying the Required Condition must register its public company status with the State Securities Commission (the SSC); and
· after the SSC confirms the registration of public company status, the relevant company will have various rights and obligations of a public company such as public disclosure, corporate governance, and registration for trading.
However, the law is silent on the obligations of a company which satisfy the Required Conditions but which has not obtained the SSC’s confirmation on public company status.