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Transactions UK
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February 20, 2026
HSF Kramer-Led Swiss Re To Buy QBE Business Segment
Swiss Re Group said Friday its commercial insurance division has agreed to acquire the global trade credit and surety business of Australia's QBE Insurance Group, to satisfy growing demand for its risk management services.
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February 20, 2026
Pharma M&A Surge Eases Biotech VC Exit Struggles
Big pharmaceutical companies circling mature drug candidates as they seek to fill a revenue hole of more than $200 billion — created by a looming patent cliff — might provide respite to venture capital investors that have struggled to exit biotech companies since COVID-19, experts say.
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February 20, 2026
HFW-Led Tullow Oil To Buy Ghana Floating Asset For $125M
Energy company Tullow said Friday that a subsidiary has agreed to acquire a majority stake in a vessel from T.E.N. Ghana MV25 BV for $125.6 million, to support its operations off the Ghanaian coast.
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February 20, 2026
Wildcat Petroleum To Quit LSE After Failed Acquisitions
Wildcat Petroleum PLC said Friday that it will drop out of the main market in London and change its focus to gold after failing to complete any acquisitions of upstream oil assets.
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February 20, 2026
Gowling Advises Helium Extractor On £7.4M Share Sale
Helium extractor Pulsar Helium Inc. said Friday that it has raised approximately £7.4 million ($10 million) through issuing shares to help back its projects and provide working capital.
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February 19, 2026
Womble Bond Clients Say Negligent Advice Sunk £126M Deal
Negligent advice from Womble Bond Dickinson during a £126 million ($170 million) luxury London property redevelopment caused the deal to collapse, lawyers for two business people and a management company said on the first day of a High Court trial on Thursday.
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February 19, 2026
UK Raises Antitrust Concerns In Getty's Shutterstock Deal
The U.K.'s antitrust authority said Thursday that it has provisionally found that Getty Images' planned $3.7 billion acquisition of Shutterstock could harm the supply of editorial images in Britain.
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February 19, 2026
FCA Chief Rathi Wants Shift Away From New Rules
The Financial Conduct Authority will seek to make fewer new rules on the sectors it regulates, its chief executive has said, amid political pressure on the watchdog to do more to support U.K. economic growth.
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February 19, 2026
Asset Manager ICG To Launch Share Buyback Of Up To £316M
Global alternative asset manager ICG PLC said Thursday that it will launch a share repurchase program of up to £316 million ($425.5 million) next week in a move to lower its share capital.
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February 19, 2026
EU Watchdog To Update Guidance On Inside Information
The European Union markets watchdog proposed Thursday to simplify guidelines on delaying disclosure of inside information under the market abuse regime, in order to reduce the burden for companies listing on stock exchanges.
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February 19, 2026
Spread-Betting Biz Fights Order To Unwind Merger With Rival
Sports betting company Spreadex urged the Competition Appeal Tribunal on Thursday to quash an order forcing it to sell a business it acquired in 2023, saying it was wrong to find that the merger would threaten competition.
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February 19, 2026
Nordic Property Biz Raises $2.4M For $3.5B Buy
Commercial property company PPI said it has raised approximately 22.5 million Norwegian krone ($2.35 million) in an equity offering to fund the 34 billion krone acquisition of a portfolio of social infrastructure properties.
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February 19, 2026
Hogan Lovells Aids Pacific Life Re's €1.3B ASR Pension Deal
Pacific Life Re has completed a longevity swap of €1.3 billion ($1.5 billion) worth of pension liabilities for Dutch insurer Aegon.
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February 19, 2026
Ashurst Guides Debenhams Brand Owner On £40M Share Sale
Boohoo Group, which trades as Debenhams Group, said on Thursday that it had raised about £40 million ($54 million) in an oversubscribed sale of shares geared toward creating additional liquidity.
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February 19, 2026
Telecoms Biz Liberty To Buy VodafoneZiggo Stake For €1B
Liberty Global has agreed to acquire Vodafone Group PLC's 50% stake in the Dutch telecommunications joint venture VodafoneZiggo for €1 billion ($1.2 billion) in cash and a minority stake in a new West European company.
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February 18, 2026
Telecom Joint Venture To Pay $2.7B For UK Fiber Company
Private equity firm InfraVia Capital Partners and European telecommunications companies Telefónica and Liberty Global will use their Nexfibre joint venture to pay $2.7 billion for Substantial Group, which is the "second-largest alternative fiber provider" in the United Kingdom, the acquiring companies announced Wednesday.
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February 18, 2026
Amaroq Weighs Move To Main Market Of The LSE
Greenland-focused mining company Amaroq said Wednesday that it will cancel its listing in Canada after nearly nine years and upgrade its listing from the junior investment market of the London Stock Exchange to its main market at the same time.
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February 18, 2026
EU Regulator Sees Risk In Simplified Sustainability Rules
A markets watchdog called on lawmakers Wednesday to adjust proposed revisions to European sustainability reporting standards to better protect consumers and stop the risk of greenwashing.
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February 18, 2026
CMS, Gowling Steer £113M Pension Deal For EU Tech Firm
European technology giant Sopra Steria Ltd. has agreed to a £113 million ($154.4 million) buy-in with Pension Insurance Corp. PLC to secure long-term retirement income for its program's 355 members, the insurer said Wednesday.
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February 18, 2026
UK Hotel Biz To Sell NYC Site For $33.5M As It Drops US Plans
Real estate company PPHE said Wednesday that it has agreed to sell a development site in Manhattan for approximately $33.5 million, shelving plans to build its first hotel and condominiums in the U.S.
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February 18, 2026
Oil And Gas Co. Raises £2M, Eyes Licenses In Southeast Asia
Upland Resources Ltd. said Wednesday that it has successfully completed a share sale to raise £2 million ($2.7 million), funds that will help back its licensing ambitions in Southeast Asia.
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February 18, 2026
Taylor Wessing Steers £11M Energy Consultancy Pension Deal
The pension plan for Noble Denton, an adviser to the oil and gas exploration industry, has agreed to a full scheme buy-in worth £11.4 million ($15.5 million), securing the retirement benefits of 106 members, an insurer broker has said.
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February 18, 2026
Energy Biz Shareholders To Vote On Gas Field Deal
Beacon Energy PLC said Wednesday that it has set a date in March for shareholders to vote on its planned acquisition of a stake in a gas field project in Italy.
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February 18, 2026
Sackers, WTW Steer £700M IBM Pension Scheme Buy-In
The U.K. pension plan of a subsidiary of International Business Machines Corp. has completed a £700 million ($950 million) buy-in transaction, securing the retirement benefits of more than 3,600 members, Standard Life said on Wednesday.
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February 17, 2026
Property Biz Eyes German Deals With £77M Capital Raise
Sirius Real Estate Ltd. said Tuesday it will receive £77 million ($104 million) in proceeds from a share offering as it looks to snap up defense-related assets in Germany.
Expert Analysis
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How The Pandemic And UK Security Law Are Changing Deals
Deal makers must consider how the COVID-19 pandemic has shaped the approach to material adverse change provisions in the U.K. and U.S., and how the new U.K. National Security and Investment Act regime will affect investors across the globe seeking to acquire material influence in a U.K. company, say attorneys at Covington.
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3 Foreign Investment Issues Affecting Cross-Border Deals
Now more than ever, managing the increasingly complex foreign direct investment considerations for successfully completing cross-border transactions requires parties to be attentive to the evolving regulatory landscape, particularly in the U.K. and EU, say Chase Kaniecki and William Dawley at Cleary.
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A Review Of The New UK Financial Services And Markets Bill
In revoking retained EU law and replacing it with U.K.-specific legislation, the new Financial Services and Markets Bill should mean a less cumbersome and more accessible regulatory regime than the existing patchwork of requirements, with provisions that address consumers’ concerns that they were not adequately protected, say attorneys at Ashurst.
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Tracking The Global Move Toward Tighter Mergers Scrutiny
The recent merger control case of Vivendi and Lagardère in France is indicative of a global trend of competition authorities applying stricter standards to concentrations and pursuing an increasingly aggressive enforcement agenda, particularly in the media sector, says Jérémie Marthan at White & Case.
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Dutch Merger May Promote Behavioral Remedies Across EU
A Dutch tribunal's recent clearing of the Sanoma-Iddink deal might further encourage merging parties in the EU to offer — and government agencies to accept — behavioral remedies, which was rarer when more emphasis was put on divestments, says Robert Hardy at Greenberg Traurig.
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Proposed Foreign Subsidy Regulation Has Political Overtones
The European Commission's proposed Foreign Subsidies Regulation aims to prevent subsidies that have a distortive effect on competition from being granted to foreign companies, but in directing it against governments that use companies to extend their influence in the EU, the implications are clearly political, say Lena Sandberg and Yannis Ioannidis at Gibson Dunn.
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Early Trends In UK National Security Reviews Of Transactions
The U.K.'s move to block an intellectual property deal between Beijing Infinite Vision Technology and the University of Manchester — the first such prohibition under the recently implemented National Security and Investment Act — is part of a growing body of published decisions that provides useful lessons on achieving prompt security clearance, say attorneys at Arnold & Porter.
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Guidance Notes Offer Insight On UK National Security Regime
The U.K. government recently published long-awaited market guidance notes that add a greater level of transparency regarding the national security and investment regime, providing welcome guidance to businesses and their legal advisers on submitting transaction notifications, say attorneys at Cooley.
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Ruling On EU Commission Merger Reviews Signifies U-Turn
In validating the European Commission's new policy of using Merger Regulation Article 22 to review cases that do not qualify under the merger control rules of the requesting member state, the General Court has demonstrated that the EU is prepared to move the goal posts on well-established commission policy, say attorneys at King & Spalding.
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Where New UK And EU Vertical Agreements Rules Diverge
The lack of alignment between new EU and U.K. rules on vertical agreements is likely to present challenges to multinational businesses, and it would be prudent for legal advisers and companies to bear in mind the most stringent obligations of both, says Robert Bell at Armstrong Teasdale.
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A Look Ahead At What The German M&A Market Holds In Store
Despite signs of a possible recession, there is still significant M&A activity in the German market, with long-term strategic planning, private equity investors, multiparty involvement and even the state all playing an important role, says Michael Ulmer at Cleary.
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Tips For Handling Audio Data In E-Discovery Post-Pandemic
The rise of remote meetings during the COVID-19 pandemic has boosted the volume and importance of audio data in e-discovery — so organizations in highly regulated industries must collect and process that data, and establish complex strategies to manage their audio records, says Jack Bullen at FTI Consulting.
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Agreement Among Litigants Key To Using E-Discovery Tech
Parties are increasingly using e-discovery technologies to control costs, but as a New York federal court order in Actos Antitrust Litigation shows, a well-drafted, negotiated protocol allows them to address potential objections prior to use and helps protect against later claims of incomplete production, say attorneys at McGuireWoods.
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4 Ways M&A Deals Are Changing
There are signs that the market may be cooling, but recent trends in M&A transactions reflect more than just market strength and indicate that there has been a more general change in deal approach, say attorneys at DLA Piper.
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Opinion
Law School Admissions Shouldn't Hinge On Test Scores
The American Bar Association recently granted law schools some latitude on which tests it can consider in admissions decisions, but its continued emphasis on test scores harms student diversity and is an obstacle to holistic admissions strategies, says Aaron Taylor at AccessLex.