CLS Blue Sky Blog

Davis Polk Discusses New UK Foreign-Investment Review Regime

On January 4, the UK’s new National Security and Investment filing regime became fully operational. A wide range of deals will be scrutinized for national security concerns requiring further investigation. The UK government expects to review up to 1,800 cases annually – a dramatic contrast with the handful of deals reviewed on public interest grounds in the last 20 years.

To ensure a smooth pathway to closing a notifiable deal, it will be critically important for the parties to develop clear engagement strategies with the newly established Investment Security Unit (ISU) within the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy (BEIS). Key aspects of the NSI regime include:

The NSI regime adds to an already complex and rapidly evolving foreign direct investment (FDI) screening landscape globally. An increasing number of FDI regulators across the G20 have broad discretion to scrutinize a wide range of transactions. They will often cooperate closely with antitrust regulators conducting parallel reviews.

To navigate adverse timing and other execution risks posed by this increasingly complex regulatory landscape, deal teams should focus on potential FDI and competition merger control filing requirements in the UK and elsewhere at an early stage in deal planning. In this regard, BEIS has published a one page flowchart summary1 of the regime that includes links to the rules and guidance summarised above. Knowing and planning for these risks from the outset increases the chances that reviews can be avoided or, if notification is required, that its burdens can be minimized.

This post comes to us from Davis, Polk & Wardwell LLP. It is based on the firm’s memorandum, “New UK foreign investment review regime goes live,” dated January 4, 2022, and available here.

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