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Transactions UK
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December 10, 2025
Hargreaves Lansdown Hires New GC From Direct Line
Hargreaves Lansdown said Wednesday that it has hired a new chief legal officer and company secretary from insurer Direct Line Group, months after the wealth manager was acquired by a private equity consortium.
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December 03, 2025
Ocean Wilsons' Merger With Hansa Gets Court Approval
Bermudian investment firm Ocean Wilsons said Wednesday that its all-stock merger with local rival Hansa Investment Co. Ltd. will go ahead after a court sanctioned the scheme on Tuesday.
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December 03, 2025
Claims Prevention Biz To Raise £2.2M For US Expansion
Ondo InsurTech PLC said Wednesday that it plans to raise at least £2.2 million ($2.9 million) to accelerate its expansion in the U.S.
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December 03, 2025
Bridgehaven Confirms Irish Insurer Acquisition To Enter EU
British insurance company Bridgehaven said Wednesday it has completed the acquisition of Irish insurer SureStone Insurance DAC, marking what it called an "important step" in its European ambitions.
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December 03, 2025
Latham-Led CVC To Buy Smiths Detection For £2B
Private equity giant CVC said Wednesday that it has agreed to acquire aviation security-screening company Smiths Detection for £2 billion ($2.7 billion) from Smiths Group PLC in a deal guided by Latham & Watkins and Freshfields.
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December 03, 2025
Hogan Lovells-Led Asurion To Acquire UK Insurer D&G
U.S. technology insurance firm Asurion LLC said it has agreed to acquire Domestic & General, an appliance care provider, in a bid to become a major player in the growing device and white goods appliance insurance sector.
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December 03, 2025
HSF Kramer Steers £280M Purchase Of London Holiday Inn
City Developments has acquired the 706-room Holiday Inn hotel in west London for £280 million ($372 million) from real estate vehicle Cola Holdings, as the property group moves to widen its hospitality footprint in one of the capital's smartest districts.
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December 02, 2025
Monthly Merger Review Snapshot
The FTC urged a D.C. court to block a deal involving a new heart valve treatment, and courts rejected the commission's monopolization case over Meta's past acquisitions and the agency's challenge of a medical device coatings deal. Here, Law360 looks at the major merger review developments from November.
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December 02, 2025
Oberon Says UK REIT Owes $40M Fee For Assura Takeover
A New York investment bank accused a healthcare-focused U.K. real estate investment trust and an affiliate of owing more than $40 million after the bank found a real estate portfolio acquisition target for the REIT, in a suit filed Monday in New York federal court.
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December 02, 2025
Santander Scores $472M For 3.5% Stake In Polish Unit
Banco Santander SA announced Tuesday it sold 3.5% of equity in its Polish subsidiary, Santander Bank Polska, through an accelerated placement that raised roughly PLN 1.72 billion, or about $472 million.
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December 02, 2025
Eesti Energia Unit To Sell Finnish Wind Farm For €83M
International energy company Eesti Energia said Tuesday that its subsidiary Enefit Green has agreed to sell its only wind farm in Finland to TD Asset Management and Rabbalshede Kraft for approximately €83 million ($96 million).
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December 02, 2025
Helvetia, Baloise Cleared To Form 2nd-Largest Swiss Insurer
Swiss insurers Helvetia and Baloise have said that they have won the final approval for their planned merger, confirming that the deal to create the second-largest insurance group in Switzerland will close on Dec. 5.
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December 02, 2025
Hogan Lovells Steers Royal London In £55M Annuity Purchase
Insurer Royal London said Tuesday that it has covered £55 million ($73 million) of pension liabilities for a shipping insurance company, in a deal guided by Hogan Lovells and Wedlake Bell.
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December 02, 2025
Hill Dickinson-Led Energy Investor Seals £5.3M Fundraising
Energy investor Ethtry PLC said Tuesday that it has raised £5.3 million ($7 million), which it will use to adopt cryptocurrency ethereum as part of its financial reserves.
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December 02, 2025
Gallagher Buys UK Pensions Admin Co. First Actuarial
Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. said Tuesday it has bought pensions company First Actuarial, as the U.S. company seeks to expand its services in the U.K.
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December 02, 2025
White & Case-Led Activist Blocks Investment Trusts Merger
Investment companies Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust PLC and Baillie Gifford US Growth Trust PLC said Tuesday that activist shareholder Saba Capital Management LP has shut down their proposed merger.
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December 01, 2025
Copper Miner Rejects £780M Takeover Bid From Chinese Rival
Ecuador-focused copper and gold mining company SolGold has rejected two non-binding takeover proposals from China's biggest copper producer Jiangxi Copper Co. Ltd., the latest of which valued the company at approximately £780 million ($1 billion).
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December 01, 2025
Investment Firms End $3.4B Pursuit Of Australian Insurer AUB
AUB Group Ltd. said Monday that talks with investment firms EQT AB and CVC Asia Pacific Ltd. have ended after the consortium said it would not proceed with a takeover of AUB worth AU$5.24 billion ($3.44 billion).
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December 01, 2025
Investor HICL Pulls Out Of £5.3B Infrastructure Biz Merger
HICL Infrastructure and the Renewables Infrastructure Group said Monday that they will not go ahead with their £5.3 billion ($7 billion) planned merger weeks after disclosing plans for the deal.
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December 01, 2025
Eversheds Leads Fertilizer Biz On £265M Pension Deals
Savings and investment group M&G PLC said Monday that the U.K. arm of global ammonia manufacturing giant CF Industries has completed two bulk purchase annuities worth a combined £265 million ($350 million).
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December 01, 2025
Partners& Enters Lloyd's Market With Broker Buy
Partners& Ltd. has bought a Lloyd's broker that focuses on property insurance, marking what it called the first step in building its broking business in the specialist marketplace.
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December 01, 2025
Sony Settles Enforcement Action Over $49M Share Dispute
Sony Pictures has settled enforcement action against a Chinese conglomerate after a London court ruled the Chinese business had been contractually obliged to purchase $49 million worth of shares in a production company that owns the "Octonauts" children's TV show.
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December 01, 2025
RPC-Led Engineer To Start £15M Equity Fundraising Program
BSF Enterprise PLC said Monday it has conditionally launched an equity fundraising program worth up to £15 million ($20 million) to bolster the U.K. engineer's tissue-engineering business and build an M&A war chest.
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November 28, 2025
ECJ Allows Portugal's Tax Checks On Foreign Pension Funds
Portugal could impose stricter requirements on non-resident pension funds that claim a tax exemption when proportionate, despite the European Union's rules on freedom of movement for capital, the bloc's top court has ruled.
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November 28, 2025
LetterOne Denied Compensation Over Forced Broadband Sale
An investment group backed by Russian oligarchs failed on Friday to secure the "fair market value" for its shares in a regional broadband provider that the U.K. government forced it to sell over national security concerns.
Expert Analysis
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Court Ruling Strengthens EU Stance On Non-Notifiable M&A
The recent European Union Court of Justice's decision in Towercast can be seen as part of a pattern of increasingly rigorous scrutiny of M&A, and provides scope for greater intervention by national competition authorities on acquisitions by dominant companies that do not meet the EU or national merger control thresholds for notification, say attorneys at Herbert Smith.
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How Changes To 'Acting In Concert' Will Affect UK Takeovers
The recent changes made to the rules by the U.K. Takeover Panel on who is presumed to be acting in concert will be of most interest to parties proposing to make a bid for a U.K. listed company, and give welcome clarity as to how the U.K. takeover regime operates, say attorneys at Herbert Smith.
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Key Points In Draft EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation
The draft implementing regulation on EU foreign subsidy control provides eagerly awaited guidance on the submission of mandatory notifications, but there are still many open questions, say Paul van den Berg and Merit Olthoff at Freshfields.
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ClientEarth Claim May Expand Scope Of Directors' Duties
In using litigation to hold Shell’s board of directors to account for failing to properly prepare for the net-zero transition, ClientEarth’s actions represent a shift in climate change activism strategy and an unprecedented application of directors’ duties as a mechanism to drive change, say Marlene Henderson and Danielle De Val at Browne Jacobson.
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Volatile Energy Prices Complicate Int'l Arbitration Damages
In the turbulent global energy market, international arbitration is a crucial tool for resolving cross-border disputes — but determining how, if at all, to account for recent energy price spikes when quantifying damages presents many challenges for tribunals, say attorneys at White & Case.
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A Breakdown Of The SRA's Proposed New Fining Powers
Thanks to the Solicitors Regulation Authority's pending new fining framework, which includes guidance on unsuitable fines and a fixed penalties scheme for low-level breaches, firms can expect to see more disciplinary findings leading to an SRA fine rather than referral to the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal, say Graham Reid and Shanice Holder at RPC.
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Merger Ruling Shows Risk Of Not Seeking Prior CMA Approval
The recent decision by the U.K. Competition and Markets Authority to unwind the acquisition by Cerelia Group of Jus-Rol demonstrates that despite the voluntary nature of the U.K. reporting regime, parties may wish to consider the potential for wider scrutiny when deciding whether to seek merger control clearance, say attorneys at Hogan Lovells.
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Warranty & Indemnity Insurance Considerations For M&A
With increased competition and greater capacity leading to lower premiums and deal costs, warranty and indemnity insurance is now available to the wider M&A market, and may help to limit risk and help parties focus on other key elements of the transaction, says Alice Wooler at Birketts.
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What The Dignity Takeover Deal Says About M&A Trends
While some public companies may prefer to go private to maximize company growth and shareholder returns, there are potential pitfalls and in the current uncertain economic climate pairing up between private equity and public entities is likely to increase, as evidenced by the recent Dignity takeover deal, says James Lyons at Lawrence Stephens.
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How Geopolitical Change Is Affecting M&A Activity In Europe
Several factors are leading businesses to divest from Russia and invest in central and Eastern European EU member states, with particular sectors attractive to U.K. companies and certain trends in M&A transactional activity emerging, says Oksana Howard at Colman Coyle.
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Discovery Blocking Reform Better Protects French Companies
The 2022 reforms to France's 1968 blocking statute gives French companies more tools to resist abusive discovery requests from foreign competitors and public agencies, but France should do more to defend confidential information and assert its sovereignty, says Raphael Gauvain at Betto Perben.
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A Look At New Vertical Laws, Their Opportunities And Pitfalls
Looking at trends that have gained the most traction under the new vertical laws in the EU and U.K., it is clear that brands should use the transition period wisely, ensuring that lessons have been learned on what to avoid and that go-to-market strategies are future-proof, say attorneys at K&L Gates.
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Why 2023 Could Be The Year Of The Restructuring Plan
As U.K. businesses face a challenging economic environment going into 2023, the stage may be set for a rise in restructuring plans, with early signs such as an increasing body of case law, the pragmatic approach taken by the judiciary to date and the cross-class cramdown mechanism, say Rachael Markham and Charlotte Møller at Squire Patton.
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How Mur Ruling May Affect Force Majeure Considerations
The recent U.K. Court of Appeal decision in Mur Shipping v. RTI demonstrates that exercising reasonable endeavors can include payment in an alternative currency to overcome a force majeure event, and is topical for contracting parties in light of Russia-related sanctions, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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ECJ Fiat Ruling Sets Clear Boundaries For EU State Aid Law
The European Court of Justice's recent landmark decision in Fiat v. Commission limiting the commission’s attempts to circumvent the lack of EU powers in the area of tax law has important implications in EU state aid law and beyond, say Andreas Reindl and Pietro Stella at Van Bael.