Publication
Legal strategies to tackle fraud in early-stage investments in Asia
In the wake of the recent eFishery scandal early-stage investors are recalibrating their approach to due diligence and risk tolerance.
United Kingdom | Publication | June 2022
On May 31, 2022 the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) published a document (the Response Document) summarising responses to the consultation proposals set out in the White Paper it published in March 2021 concerning wide-ranging reforms to the UK’s audit and corporate governance framework, and setting out its plans for action in light of those responses.
Many of the proposed reforms in the White Paper stemmed from recommendations made by three independent reviews of audit and corporate reporting, namely the 2018 Independent Review of the Financial Reporting Council (FRC Review) led by Sir John Kingman, the 2019 Review into the Quality and Effectiveness of Audit led by Sir Donald Brydon (Brydon Review), and the Market Study of Statutory Audit Services led by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA Study) in 2019. These reviews identified a number of weaknesses and a lack of accountability in certain areas which the White Paper sought to address and our earlier briefing considered a number of proposals in that White Paper.
The Government states in the Response Document that its objectives, which govern its overall approach, are to: (i) build trust and credibility in the UK’s audit, corporate reporting and corporate governance system; (ii) ensure accountability for those playing key roles in that system; and (iii) to increase resilience and choice in the statutory audit market. It believes that these objectives will further increase trust in the UK as a place to invest and obtain investment and to achieve this, it plans to put in place a new UK approach to regulating in this area, in line with its wider approach to regulators and regulation more generally (as set out in its January 2022 publication, The benefits of Brexit: How the UK is taking advantage of leaving the EU).
This briefing looks at the measures that the Government now intends to take forward in relation to public interest entities (PIEs) and other matters.
Publication
In the wake of the recent eFishery scandal early-stage investors are recalibrating their approach to due diligence and risk tolerance.
Publication
As we stand on the cusp of transformative change within the energy sector, anticipation builds around the UK government’s impending decision on the Review of Electricity Market Arrangements (REMA). This briefing provides a recap of the proposals made to date and looks at the potential future impact of the REMA proposals on market players.
Publication
Following the launch of the new Electricity Law on 30 November 2024, which took effect on 1 February 2025 (Electricity Law 2024), Decision No. 768/QD-TTg (Decision 768) issued on 15 April 2025 by the Prime Minister of Vietnam approved the revised National Power Development Plan VIII (PDP 8) for the period 2021–2030, with a vision to 2050. This decision replaces the previous Decision No. 500/QD-TTg, dated 15 May 2023.
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