5 January 2021
Lawyers, Dealmakers and Experts See Increased M&A Disputes Brewing in 2021
The full surge of COVID-19-related claims is still to hit
The new annual BRG M&A Disputes Report – Asia-Pacific shows economic and political pressures, exacerbated by COVID-19, could put buyers and sellers at odds in 2021.
The arrival—and unwelcome stay—of the pandemic has done nothing to slow the existing increase of M&A disputes in the APAC region, and it is highly likely that 2021 will see an even steeper rise, as disagreements fermented during the ‘Year of Lockdowns’ turn into full-blown disputes. That is a core message that comes from the report.
In interviews and survey responses, senior lawyers and dealmakers cited a steady, gradual uptick in deal-related disputes that began several years ago. They increasingly expect that market conditions in 2021 will put buyers and sellers at odds over a variety of deal terms, accelerating that upwards trend.
Contributors included:
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John Choong, Partner, Freshfields, Hong Kong
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Lars Markert, Foreign Law Partner, Nishimura & Asahi, Tokyo
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Kathryn Sanger, Partner, Herbert Smith Freehills, Hong Kong
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Niels Schiersing, Independent Arbitrator, Arbitration Chambers
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Matthew Skinner, Partner, Jones Day, Singapore and London
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Thomas Walsh, Partner, Clifford Chance, Hong Kong
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Mustafa Hadi, Managing Director, BRG, Hong Kong and Singapore
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Kevin Hagon, Director, BRG, London and Hong Kong
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Peter Bird, Managing Director, BRG, London and Singapore
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Andrew Webb, Managing Director, BRG, London and Singapore
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Erick Gunawan, Director, BRG, Singapore
Click here to read the full report.
For further information, please contact:
Mustafa Hadi, Managing Director (Hong Kong and Singapore), Berkeley Research Group
mhadi@thinkbrg.com