NHG contributes to Chambers Global Practice Guide: Investment Funds

Our Partners Hector Arangua y Adalberto Valadez, contributed to the Chambers Global Practice Guide – Investment Funds, Mexico chapter. The Investment Funds guide provides expert legal commentary on key issues for businesses and this guide covers the important developments in the most significant jurisdictions.

You can download the PDF here or read the full article at Chambers & Partners website.

 




NHG recognized as Capital Markets Law Firm of the Year 2018 by Best Lawyers

Nader, Hayaux & Goebel is pleased to inform that Best Lawyers, a publication that gathers information from other firms and lawyers, has recognized NHG as Law Firm of the Year 2018 in the practice of Mercado de Valores. This recognition is determined based on certain factors including comments from other attorneys, coverage and scope of the firm in this area of practice, historical analysis of the winners in Lawyer of the Year and the reputation of the firm as an expert in this area.

Likewise, we are pleased to inform you that Michell Nader, Yves Hayaux y Hans Goebel have been recognized as Lawyer of the Year, in the practices of Project Finance & Development, Insurance Law y Structured Finance Law, respectively.

For the full rankings of Nader, Hayaux & Goebel, visit Best Laywers.




Dos nuevos Socios marcan la tendencia de un sólido crecimiento en Nader, Hayaux & Goebel

Nader, Hayaux & Goebel se complace en informar que Ana Paula Telleria y José Humberto Rocha han sido nombrados Socios del Despacho a partir del 1 de enero de 2019.

La práctica de Ana Paula se especializa principalmente en valores y mercados de capital, con experiencia significativa en operaciones garantizadas, incluyendo joint ventures, fusiones y adquisiciones y temas relacionados de derecho corporativo. Ella está involucrada con regularidad en operaciones transfronterizas en relación con la estructuración, desarrollo y financiamiento de proyectos en México.

Ana Paula también se especializa en operaciones de financiamiento e inversión en el sector inmobiliario. Ha representado a clientes en diversos proyectos inmobiliarios incluyendo desarrollos comerciales, industriales, residenciales y de negocios, desarrollos turísticos (hoteles, proyectos de tiempo compartido y desarrollos de uso mixto). Asimismo tiene experiencia significativa en la asesoría a clientes para la estructuración de certificados de capital de desarrollo (CKDs), fideicomisos de inversión en bienes raíces (FIBRAs), fondos de capital privado y otros instrumentos de inversión para el sector inmobiliario. Ana Paula ha sido clasificada por segundo año consecutivo como Associate to watch en el área de Mercados de Capital por la publicación de Chambers & Partners Latinoamérica. Obtuvo su licenciatura en Derecho en la Universidad Panamericana (2007) y cursó la maestría en derecho de New York University School of Law (2012) con especialización en Derecho Corporativo.

José Humberto es experto en derecho financiero, asesorando a instituciones financieras nacionales y extranjeras y otras organizaciones financieras en operaciones nacionales, transfronterizas y globales, así como a grandes empresas en la estructuración y reestructuración de su deuda.

Como asociado de NHG, ha sido el principal abogado en todo tipo de operaciones de crédito, incluidas facilidades de crédito innovadoras y tradicionales garantizadas por diferentes tipos de garantías, tales como hipotecas inmobiliarias, fideicomisos, hipotecas marítimas garantías tangibles e intangibles y otro tipo de garantías corporativas.

José Humberto tiene una sólida experiencia en derecho bancario, finanzas corporativas, fusiones y adquisiciones, capital privado, y reestructuraciones de deuda y corporativas. Se graduó como abogado de la Universidad Anáhuac en 2009 y cuenta con una Maestría en Derecho Corporativo (Mención Honorífica) y un Postgrado en Derecho Corporativo de la Universidad Anáhuac. En 2014 completó su LL.M. en University of Chicago Law School y trabajó como asociado extranjero en la oficina de Nueva York de Proskauer Rose, LLP de 2014 a 2015.

El Despacho está orgulloso de los nombramientos de Ana Paula y José Humberto. Estamos seguros de que en sus nuevas posiciones, continuarán fortaleciendo las capacidades del Despacho en algunas de sus prácticas principales, incluyendo mercados de capital, bancario y financiero, y fusiones y adquisiciones.

 




O’Donnell-Structuring and Public Offering of CKDs

NHG advised Grupo O’Donnell in the structuring and placement of structured notes (certificados de capital de desarrollo) or CKDs in the Mexican Stock Exchange (Bolsa Mexicana de Valores) issued through an issuing trust (fideicomiso) with an initial issuance of MXN$400 million plus additional commitments, through a capital call mechanism, for a total committed issuance amount of MXN$2 billion (approximately US$100 million) with the purpose to create a private-equity fund to invest, from time to time, in industrial real estate and urban infrastructure.

This placement represents the first structured notes issued by O’Donnell, and it also involved the participation of two coinvestors controlled by O’Donnell.




Guide to equity and debt capital markets law in Mexico: regulatory overview.

Hans Goebel and Monica Ramos have published a regulatory overview of equity and debt capital markets in Mexico in cooperation with Thomson Reuters.

The Equity Q&A guide gives an overview of main equity markets/exchanges, regulators and legislation, listing requirements, offering structures, advisers, prospectus/offer document, marketing, bookbuilding, underwriting, timetables, stabilisation, tax, continuing obligations and de-listing. The PDF of this article can be downloaded aquí. This Q&A is part of Thomson Reuters’ global guide to equity capital markets law. For a full list of jurisdictional Q&As visit www.practicallaw.com/equitycapitalmarkets-guide. To compare answers across multiple jurisdictions, visit the equity capital markets Country Q&A tool.

The Q&A gives an overview of legislative restrictions on selling debt securities, market activity and deals, structuring a debt securities issue, main debt capital markets/exchanges, listing debt securities, continuing obligations, advisers and documents, debt prospectus/main offering document, timetables, tax, clearing and settlement, and reform.  The PDF of this article can be downloaded aquí.  This Q&A is part of Thomson Reuters’ global guide to debt capital markets law. For a full list of jurisdictional Q&As visit www.practicallaw.com/debtcapitalmarkets-guide.




Incorporation of Alejandro Mendiola as new Antitrust Partner and Jorge Siegrist as Of Counsel

Nader, Hayaux & Goebel is pleased to announce the incorporation of Alejandro Mendiola as Partner and Jorge Siegrist as Of Counsel.

Alejandro will lead the Antitrust Practice of the Firm, which has been involved in very large M&A transactions and investigations in sensitive industries. The expertise of Alejandro will raise this practice to a new level. Alejandro has more than 20 years of experience with merger control proceedings, investigations and complex antitrust matters. He was formerly a partner of an independent law firm in Mexico City and before then, he was an official of the Mexican Antitrust Commission.

Alejandro has worked for national and international clients in high profile cases and has developed antitrust compliance programs for multiple companies.

Jorge has more than thirty years of experience. He is a consummate M&A, securities and banking lawyer. He was previously the General Counsel of Grupo Modelo and Grupo BAL. Jorge will strengthen the offering of the Firm in corporate finance matters and he will have the responsibility of expanding the compliance and corporate governance practice of the Firm.

Michell Nader, Chairman of the Firm, indicated that the arrival of Alejandro and Jorge is part of the long-term strategy of the Firm with internal and external growth. The arrival of Alejandro and Jorge responds to our clients’ needs for a broader scope of services.




London calling: reflections on bilateral trade between the UK and Mexico

In an extensive interview with Christina Mckeon Frutuoso of Latin Lawyer, Nader, Hayaux & Goebel´s resident partner in London, Yves Hayaux-du-Tilly Laborde, reflects on how far bilateral relations between the UK and Mexico have come and whether Brexit and the election of Donald Trump in the US will make that relationship stronger.

A transcript of the interview, which was first published on Latin Lawyer’s website on 23 April 2018, is rendered below:

Latin Lawyer: Where is UK-Mexican trade currently looking positive?

Yves Hayaux-du-Tilly: The food and drinks industry is growing on both sides: whiskey is being exported to Mexico – it represents around 8% of exports into Mexico – and tequila imported to the UK. There’s a massive consumer market now in Mexico, a country with a huge demographic and an increasing number of young consumers. Mexican restaurants are also growing exponentially in the UK. There’s a lot of appetite for these kinds of projects.

Insurance investment has also been positive on both sides. There’s currently only two Latin American investors into Lloyd’s of London, both of which are Mexican, which is both a recent and important development.

LL: What makes Mexican investors more attractive than other Latin American insurance investors, using Lloyd’s as a case study?

YH: I think the fact that the only two Latin American investors are both Mexican has to do with the sophistication of Mexican insurance companies; the appetite that Lloyd’s and the London market has for Mexican risk; the volume [of risk] is also quite attractive; and the reputation of Mexican insurance companies which is very good.

LL: Which other sectors have seen strong relations between the two nations?

YH: Fintech is going to grow in a very important manner. The UK government has been extremely helpful and engaged in sharing best practices with Mexico in relation to the recently passed fintech law, especially concerning the sandbox concept and how the FCA has been dealing with it. Mexican companies [in London] are now looking forward to bringing some of the best practices they have learnt here over to Mexico.

LL: Where do you see room for improvement in UK-Mexico trade?

YH: We have all heard about UK Expert Finance (UKEF)’s £5 million pound facility [pledged to help UK businesses looking to export to Mexico] which is very important, but not enough has been done to employ that £5 million in actual loans to British companies. There’s only really been one project so far, the Metrobus project, funded by Santander, which will see the export of British double decker buses to Mexico City. But considering the sum available, I think there is more to be done.

LL: In what industries can we expect this UKEF money to be invested?

YH: I think a lot will go into energy, as was discussed at UK Mexico day last month, and the UK is already leading investments into Mexico’s oil and gas sector. The number of British companies that have been successful in their bids exceeds any other nationality in general terms. You have the big companies like BP and Shell, but other lesser-known companies like Capricorn and Premier Oil are finding great ground to develop with the opening of Mexico’s oil and gas industry.

LL: Where has investment been disappointing between the two nations?

YH: What’s been most disappointing is the number of infrastructure projects in Mexico in general terms. There has only really been the one major project – the Mexico City airport – which of course has been very successful: a number of British companies have been involved in the project, including [British design and engineering firm] Foster and Partners, as well as others involved in the construction, supervision and engineering side of things.

A lot was said [by the Mexican administration] about doubling the capacity of ports and more social infrastructure at federal level but really, we haven’t see this materialise. I wanted to see more major projects aside from hospitals or highways. There is the train project between Mexico City and Toluca currently underway, but there are question marks over the benefits of such a project. There was also the high-speed train to Guadalajara project, which was cancelled.

LL: A number of UK law firms have opened up offices in Latin America recently [Kennedys, Clyde & Co LLP and DAC Beachcroft]. Do you think we can expect to see more opening in Mexico?

YH: I don’t really think many other firms are interested in opening up an office in Mexico. Most English firms we work with have not contemplated this and are quite happy working with Mexican independent firms. The only thing that might bring about this change would be a tremendous increase in capital markets and energy work. But for now, everyone seems happy to continue working on a cross-border basis and relying on local counsel for the Mexican components. Of course, there are firms like Hogan Lovells and Norton Rose Fulbright [expanding in Mexico] that have decided not to work like that, but it’s debatable whose approach is best.

LL: Going forward, how can the UK and Mexico make bilateral relations stronger?

YH: The only way we are going to be able to make this bilateral relationship work is through more engagement on a personal level from key stakeholders. This is something Nader Hayaux has previously considered, back in 2010 when we opened in London. We were in the midst of the financial crisis, coming from the boom of the 2000s when the problem at the time for lawyers was getting the work done, there was so much of it. That all then changed once the stock markets crashed. At the time, we were concerned over relying so much on the US, and we wanted to have more sources of work and relationships. Part of our decision to open in London was that we needed to divest our interest, and we saw that no Mexican firm was doing enough to develop relationships with European law firms and clients. By opening an office here, we were thinking long-term.

LL: Tell us about the role of the Mexican Chamber of Commerce, which you founded in 2011.

YH: When we [Nader Hayaux] opened our office in London, we also set our sights on helping to form a Mexican Chamber of Commerce to create a platform to permit private sector organisations and governments to collaborate with a mutual aim to grow trade and investment between UK and Mexico. Trade between the two countries is £3.6 billion, but more needs to be done. We hear a lot of rhetoric about the importance of Mexico for the UK, but the city of London is not pulling its weight in terms of allowing New York dominance over Mexican financial services. The UK would benefit from being more present, for example in areas like asset management, but I’m still waiting to see how long it will take London to put up a fight against New York to get more Mexican business. So far, New York dominates completely – there are currently only two UK banks and only one UK insurance company, Bupa, in Mexico.

LL: Why do you think London, until now at least, has been hesitant to put up this fight?

YH: My theory is that the UK has been very comfortable with Europe, and their presence in Southeast Asia, in former colonies, is stronger than in Latin America. There probably is this perception that the US dominates and controls Latin America, and the UK has a natural tendency to leave Latin America to the US. But Brexit and the Trump administration have pulled all of this into question. Today, nothing is to be taken for granted.

LL: How has Brexit and the Trump administration affected legal practice around the world?

You’ve probably heard Einstein’s definition of stupidity – doing the same thing and expecting different results. But times have changed, and I think Einstein fell short – nowadays, it seems stupidity is doing the same thing and expecting the same results! If countries continue dealing with Trump’s US as they have dealt with the US in the past, their expectations are going to fall short. This attitude applies to the legal industry also – lawyers can’t expect to practise law in the same way they did even five years ago. The Trump administration and Brexit have caused Mexico, the US and the UK to rethink their relationships. As a result, the UK government has singled out and made clear the relevance and importance it now places on its relationship with Mexico in a post-Brexit era.

LL: So Nader Hayaux feels prepared to face the challenges that come in a post-Brexit era?

Nowadays, law firms have Trump and Brexit as sources of potential work and relationships; when we opened in London in 2010, the financial crisis was our backdrop amid concerns that we were relying on the US so much. I think we are in the right place at the right time, as a result of the long-term project we set out on when we opened here in London. But opportunities are like red buses – you might be waiting for a while, and then suddenly five come at once. What’s important though, is to be standing in the bus stop, in order to see them coming.

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Capital Markets team contributes to Latin Lawyer Reference chapter

Socios Hans Goebel y Diego Sanchez participated in the Latin Lawyer Reference chapter on Capital Markets. This country-specific Q&A provides an overview of Capital Markets regulations in Mexico.




Landmark Fibra E Project commended in FT´s 2017 Special Report North America Innovative Lawyers

A landmark project in which Nader, Hayaux & Goebel participated was recently commended in the 2017 Financial Times’ Innovative Lawyers rankings in under the category ‘Accessing New Markets and Capital’.  A team lead by Michell Nader, Gunter Schwandt and Adalberto Valadez assisted investment vehicle CKD IM, as spsonsor, in the creation, registration and approval by the the Mexican securities regulator of an innovative Fibra E securities programme, worth 50bn pesos ($2.6bn), that will allow companies to use tax-efficient structured financing to fund purchases of energy and infrastructure assets.

“This unprecedented matter will change the nature of the Fibra E market which had been primarily conceived as a monetization vehicle to allow new Fibras E to act as growth vehicles. This will give CKDIM an important advantage in the acquisition of assets in the future and the ability to harness business opportunities quickly and efficiently.” -Michell Nader, Partner-

For more information please consult the report by the Financial Times. Additonal coverage on the transaction is available on Latin Lawyer.

 




Nader, Hayaux & Goebel se complace en informar que Mónica Ramos ha sido nombrada como Consejera de la firma.

Nader, Hayaux & Goebel se complace en informar que Mónica Ramos ha sido nombrada como Consejera de la firma. Mónica tiene más de 13 años de experiencia en fusiones y adquisiciones, mercados de capital y áreas de práctica bancaria y financiera. Ha desarrollado una especialización en emisiones públicas y privadas de deuda y capital, CKD y asuntos regulatorios.

De acuerdo con Hans P. Goebel C., "Mónica ha demostrado constantemente un gran compromiso a lo largo de los 10 años que ha dedicado a su carrera profesional con este equipo. Su promoción como asesora legal es un testimonio de cómo ha ayudado a nuestra empresa y a nuestros clientes a través de su arduo trabajo, y claramente posiciona a Nader, Hayaux & Goebel como una empresa que valora la diversidad que el talento femenino aporta a la mesa. Estamos encantados de seguir creciendo junto a ella."

Mónica se graduó de Derecho en el Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México y tiene una maestría en Derecho de Negocios Internacionales (Paris II-Assas).
Algunos de los asuntos recientes en los que Mónica ha estado involucrada incluyen la representación de Axis en la emisión de CKD bajo el mecanismo de llamadas de capital por un total de $ 6,500 millones de pesos, así como en la actualización de dichos CKDs; la representación de Prudential (compañías de seguros) en la adquisición de pagarés emitidos por diferentes clientes, ya sea en colocaciones privadas seguras o no garantizadas y el asesoramiento a Bayer AG sobre la exclusión de su subgrupo Bayer MaterialScience en Covestro.

Esta nueva posición de Mónica fortalecerá aún más las capacidades de la Firma en los mercados de capitales, la banca y las finanzas y el trabajo de fusiones y adquisiciones.