SECURITIZATION IN CURACAO

Curacaoan special purpose vehicles are commonly used in cross–border financing transactions

Curacaoan special purpose vehicles (SPVs) are commonly used in both cross–border financing transactions as well as in Curacao domestic financing transactions. As far as cross–border transactions are concerned, (synthetic and cash) securitizations, repackagings, collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), collateralized loan obligations (CLOs), leasing transactions, MTN and other note issuance programs are among the most popular transactions involving a Curacao SPV.

There are a number of reasons that make Curacao an attractive jurisdiction in which to set up SPVs in structured financing transactions. The first of these is the favorable Curacaoan …
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24
Jul 2011
CATEGORY

Finance

COMMENTS No Comments

THE ANNUAL ACCOUNTS OF A LARGE CURACAO COMPANY

Stricter rules for large companies

Under Curacao law the annual accounts of limited liability companies which do not qualify as so called large companies, need to be prepared in accordance with generally accepted standards and shall provide sufficient insight as to enable a sound judgment to be formed regarding the assets and the results and, to the extent the nature of the annual accounts so permit, regarding the solvency and liquidity of the company (article 2:116 (4) Curacao Civil Code). This is comparable to the principles of good business practice (goed koopmansgebruik).

For large companies the legislator chose a tighter …
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18
Jul 2011
CATEGORY

Corporate

COMMENTS No Comments

SUMMARY PROCEEDINGS IN ARUBA, BONAIRE, CURACAO AND SAINT MAARTEN

Preliminary relief within several weeks, sometimes within days or hours

In all matters for which an immediate injunction, measure, or decision is required, the parties may address themselves to the Courts. If the matter does not require immediate resolution, the Court will deny the relief sought and refer the parties to the normal procedure. These preliminary relief proceedings (kort geding procedure) differ substantially from, for instance, US summary proceedings.

This type of intervention by the Courts is sought in many kinds of matters, including disputes with shareholders, attachments, or the enforcement of judgments. At the request of the claimant, the …
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12
Jul 2011
CATEGORY

Legal

COMMENTS No Comments

GRANTING DISCHARGE TO MANAGING DIRECTORS

Discharge is not bankruptcy proof

The Civil Codes of Curaçao, Sint Maarten and Bonaire do not contain provisions specifically dealing with discharging managing directors from liability. Neither is there conclusive Dutch Caribbean case law available yet.

Managing directors of a limited liability company (NV or BV) can be discharged from their liability towards the company. Managers can be discharged of liability by an express shareholders’ resolution, however the articles of many companies contain a provision stating that approval of the annual accounts by the shareholders’ meeting discharges the managing director from his/her liability towards the company with regards to the …
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21
Jun 2011
CATEGORY

Corporate

COMMENTS No Comments

STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES LACK OF INDEPENDENT SUPERVISION

Independent supervision should be mandatory for government-owned entities

It has been my opinion for many years already that government-owned companies should be kept out of the political sphere as much as possible, so that they may benefit from a commercial, businesslike and market-oriented management. In doing so they also run less of a risk of being milked or used as political toys.

Recently, I commented on the model articles of association (statuten) drawn up for government companies by order of the country Curacao. They grant the shareholders meeting (i.e. the government) and the board of supervisory directors of the companies in …
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13
Jun 2011
CATEGORY

Corporate

COMMENTS No Comments

BANKING REGULATIONS IN THE DUTCH CARIBBEAN

Soliciting funds requires a license

The Netherlands Antilles was dissolved on October 10, 2010. Prior to that date the Netherlands Antilles consisted of Curacao, St. Maarten, Bonaire, St. Eustatius, and Saba, and formed, together with the Netherlands and Aruba, the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Curacao and St. Maarten have become independent countries within the Kingdom. They stand on equal footing with the Netherlands and with Aruba, each country with its own set of laws. Bonaire, St. Eustatius and Saba (the “BES-islands”), have, as public entities, become part of the Netherlands. The civil, corporate and banking laws of Curacao, St. Maarten …
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10
May 2011
CATEGORY

Legal

COMMENTS No Comments

GOVERNMENT OWNED ENTITIES IN CURACAO

Concerns about additional authorities Ministers

Attorney Karel Frielink is concerned about the additional authorities which cabinet-members have appropriated over government NV’s.

According to Frielink, who is also President of the Bar Association, these extra authorities increase the chance of ‘political influencing, favoritism and other forms of abuse’ within government institutions.

In an opinion paper, published in the Antilliaans Dagblad, Frielink comments on the model articles of association (statuten) recently drawn up for government companies by order of the country Curacao. According to the government’s explanatory notes, the new model articles of association particularly dwell on the exceptional position of government NV’s …
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04
May 2011
CATEGORY

Corporate

COMMENTS No Comments

WHO DETERMINES THE POLICY OF A DUTCH CARIBBEAN COMPANY?

The management board is in charge

The shareholders have the authority to determine the general policy of a Dutch Caribbean NV or BV. The shareholders may give instructions to the management board with respect to the general direction of the financial, social, economic and personnel policies of the corporation.

However, the shareholders cannot give detailed instructions to the management board unless (in the general view of legal practitioners, myself included) the articles of association so permit. Although not explicitly provided for in Book 2 of the Dutch Caribbean Civil Code (CC), it is considered a general rule of corporate law …
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03
May 2011
CATEGORY

Corporate

COMMENTS No Comments

PROPOSED REVIEW CORPORATE CODE ON ULTRA VIRES

The rules with regard to ultra vires are fundamentally changed

Ultra vires means ‘beyond power or authority’. An ultra vires act is one beyond the purpose clause as laid down in the Articles of Association of a legal entity, for instance a foundation or a limited liability company (NV or BV).

Early in 2010, a draft bill was proposed to amend the Corporate Code (Book 2 Civil Code) of Curacao, St. Maarten, Bonaire, St. Eustatius and Saba (which formerly constituted the Netherlands Antilles). Among other things, the provisions with regard to ultra vires acts (transgression of the object) have been …
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16
Feb 2011
CATEGORY

Corporate

COMMENTS No Comments

A PUBLIC LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY AND LEGAL PERSONALITY

Dutch Supreme Court, Decision of 18 January 1901

Suppose you and several of your friends decided to combine your financial resources to start a business. You subsequently agreed on the incorporation of a limited liability company (NV). You also agreed on the amount each of you would put into the NV and the number of shares each of you would receive in return for this capital contribution. You and your friends then visited the civil law notary and a notarial deed incorporating the NV was executed. The NV now exists.

However, although you and your friends paid their respective capital …
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18
Jan 2011
CATEGORY

Corporate

COMMENTS No Comments

PROPOSED REVIEW DUTCH CARIBBEAN LEGISLATION ON REPRESENTATION

Restrictions in managing authority work through into the representative authority

Earlier in 2010, a draft bill was proposed to amend the Corporate Code (Book 2 Civil Code) of Curacao, St. Maarten, Bonaire, St. Eustatius and Saba (which formerly constituted the Netherlands Antilles). Hopefully, the Bill comes into force in 2011. Some of the proposed changes will be discussed here.

Restrictions of the managing authority can arise from a by-law or a corporate agreement. Individual Managing Directors exercise their powers with due observance of the resolutions of the Management Board (Article 2:8 paragraph 2 Civil Code). Subject to restrictions arising from …
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10
Nov 2010
CATEGORY

Corporate

COMMENTS No Comments

THE MANAGEMENT BOARD OF A DUTCH CARIBBEAN LEGAL ENTITY

The management board is responsible for the day-to-day affairs

The management board has the function of managing the legal entity, i.e., making policy and conducting the day-to-day management of such legal entity (NV, BV, Foundation or Association). The management board is responsible for the management of the entity and is authorized to represent it, except where restricted by the articles of incorporation.

The management board is the legal entity’s centre of gravity. The management board of a Curacao or St. Maarten company (NV or BV) combines the functions of executive directors and senior officers in a U.S. corporation, unless the …
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18
Oct 2010
CATEGORY

Corporate

COMMENTS No Comments