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Date & Time: 7-8 August 2024 (Day 1 & 2: 9.30am - 5.00pm)
Venue: SAL, Stamford 1 & 2, The Adelphi #08-08, 1 Coleman Street S(179803)Corporate Module 1: Deal Structuring
This module is designed for junior lawyers to be able to understand the fundamentals of deal structuring legal transactions; develop skills to analyse the features, merits, and drawbacks of common deal structures in various practice areas and to advise clients on deal structures confidently. Participants will be able to:
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Distinguish between deal types, such as asset sale and share sale transactions, and grasp the unique provisions needed for each
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Address cross-border complexities, encompassing governing law, jurisdictional considerations, and contractual provisions like warranties and indemnities
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Explore the various stages of deal progression, incorporating preliminary agreements to facilitate negotiation and due diligence processes effectively
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Examine different business frameworks, including the function of holding companies, and consider the contribution of transactional lawyers in facilitating deals
Come join us for a complimentary session with Dr. Andrew Godwin on "Practice, Academia, and Law Reform – Weaving the Threads Together" on 7 August 2024. Registration starts at 5:00pm, seminar at 5:30pm, and networking refreshments at 6:30pm, held at Stamford 1 & 2, Singapore Academy of Law. Discover insights from Dr. Godwin's 15 years in private practice, 15 years in academia, and 3.5 years in law reform work. Click here Practice, Academia and Law Reform – Weaving the Threads Together (lawnet.com) for more details.
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Date/ Time: 28 August 2024, 4.00pm - 6.00pm SGT
Venue: SAL, Stamford 1 & 2, The Adelphi #08-08, 1 Coleman Street (S179803)
This bundle is exclusively for SAL members. It includes:
(1) Seminar: Developments in Corporate Law,
(2) Printed Book: Corporate Law (2nd Edition) Book(1) Seminar: Developments in Corporate Law, 28 August 2024 (4pm - 6pm)
Professor Lee Pey Woan will commence the seminar by reviewing recent decisions of Singapore courts on veil-piercing. The discussion will extend to an analysis of the UK Supreme Court’s retreat from the case of Press v Petrodel case and explore alternative methods to bypass the corporate veil with particular focus on parent companies’ liabilities in negligence for the activities of their subsidiaries. Professor Lee will also draw connections between these issues and the wrongful trading and creditor-regarding duties of directors.
Professor Pearlie Koh will take up the discussion by considering the Singapore Court of Appeal’s decision in Foo Kian Beng and its possible implications for the statutory regulation of directors’ duties. The discussion will cover recent cases in the UK and New Zealand which have similarly dealt with creditor-regarding duties, and draw potential connections to the broader corporate purpose debate.
Professor Hans Tjio will conclude the formal presentations by examining financial assistance and capital maintenance, including the impact of legislative changes to the Companies Act and relevant exceptions, and the interaction with the creditor-regarding duties of directors. He will also propose an analysis of potential reform of framework for directors’ duties.
A panel discussion moderated by Ms Lock Yin Mei will follow, providing an opportunity for the speakers to engage in a comprehensive dialogue on the presented topics and address questions from the audience.
This seminar promises to offer valuable insights into the critical areas of corporate law, providing attendees with a deeper understanding of the challenges and complexities faced by corporations and their directors.
(2) Printed Book: Corporate Law (2nd Edition) Book
This second edition of Corporate Law incorporates the many changes recommended by the Companies Act Working Group (“CAWG”) in May 2019. Some of them were introduced by the Companies, Business Trusts and Other Bodies (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 2023 (Act 17 of 2023). Many of these involved the digital medium, which the COVID-19 pandemic showed that businesses required, in terms of notices, meetings, voting and communication generally. Going forward, the CAWG recognised that the Companies Act 1967 should remain as technologically neutral as possible. Continuing with the theme in the first edition, we agree that legislation should, as far as possible, permit innovation and development through changes to the corporate constitution. Even if most of the Act’s provisions are mandatory as the CAWG observed, the Act is not exhaustive of how businesses can be structured. This is perhaps seen most clearly in the new forms of fundraising that have arisen outside the regulated use of shares and debentures. The courts have led the way in recognising digital assets as forms of personal property, giving investors confidence to invest in them.
Through extensive case law analysis, this book offers invaluable insights into the changing landscape of corporate law in Singapore. It discusses judicial precedents which have significantly contributed to the development of areas of corporate law in Singapore. Explored within the pages of this book are areas including, but not limited to (a) the extent of membership rights; (b) veil piercing; (c) the permissibility of boards in approving conflict transactions carried out by their directors; (d) “core” fiduciary duties; (e) shareholder oppression in rights issues and generally in relation to corporate wrongs; (f) the no‑reflective loss principle; (g) capital maintenance and share repurchases; (h) floating charges and charge registration; and (i) liquidation generally and in the context of the restructuring of business trusts and partnerships.Please note that collection of book will be on-site on the day of the seminar.
Member's Price: $137.50 (before GST)
For non-members who would like to attend the event, please click here for details.
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This bundle includes the following:
- Legal Innovation Workshop: U.P.: S$1,200.00
- TechLaw.Fest 2024 - Two Day Pass (11-12 Sep): U.P.: S$850.00
Legal Innovation workshop:
Date & Time: 10 and 13 September 2024Day 1, 10 September: 9.00am - 4.00pm
Day 2, 13 September: 9.00am - 4.45pm
Venue: ALC Theatrette
#07-03 (via Lift Lobby B)
Lifelong Learning Institute
11 Eunos Rd 8, Singapore 408601This 2-day legal innovation course is designed to:
• Provide an analytical excursion of the state of legal innovation in Singapore and the region as well as best practices in legal innovation.
• Explore legal innovation methodology, including legal design thinking, legal process re-engineering, legal digital transformation, and legal generative artificial intelligence (Legal GenAI)
• Share case studies of law firms and legal departments in Singapore and other jurisdictions that have adopted innovation practices to solve efficiency problems, client experience, as well as using technology
• Explore the state of legal technology (Legal Tech), uncovering the capabilities and limitations of the underlying technologies as well as showcasing examples in legal workflows
• Ensure an interactive experience for the young lawyers where participants will also learn to apply the principles in creating process maps to visualise legal workflows and understand how Legal Tech and Legal GenAI could be applied in practice
• Understand the professional and ethical considerations in legal practice in the context of legal innovation, Legal Tech, and Legal GenAITechlaw.Fest 2024 Two Day Pass:
Date & Time: 11 and 12 September: 8.30am – 5.00pm
Venue: Sands Expo and Convention Centre, Singapore
For more information on Techlaw.Fest 2024, click here.
[Bundle] Legal Innovation Workshop and Techlaw.Fest 2024 Two Day PassSGD 2,234.50 Usual Price: SGD 1,329.80CS CPD