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Navigating international trade and tariffs
Recent tariffs and other trade measures have transformed the international trade landscape, impacting almost every sector, region and business worldwide.
United Kingdom | Publication | August 2022
The Economic Crime (Transparency and Enforcement) Act 2022 (the Act) received Royal Assent on March 15, 2022. Part 1 of the Act (Part 1) establishes a new register of overseas entities (ROE) that own, or want to own, land in the UK. The ROE, which is maintained by Companies House, went “live” on Monday August 1, 2022 and is now open to receive applications for registration.
The Act extends to the whole of the UK but this briefing describes the regime as it applies in England and Wales.
In broad terms:
Registration involves the overseas entity providing information about itself and its “registrable beneficial owners” or, if there are none, its managing officers. Applications for registration must include (amongst other things):
Additional information must be included with an application for registration submitted during the transitional period ending on January 31, 2023:
Once registered in the ROE, there is a further duty on overseas entities to update the information on the ROE every 12 months.
Subject to some limited exemptions, a person will be a beneficial owner of an overseas entity if they meet one (or more) conditions – broadly that they:
The Act covers situations where rights or shares are held in a “joint arrangement” or where shares are held by a nominee, to try to ensure that a beneficial owner cannot disguise their control or ownership. Provision is also made for situations where an interest in an overseas entity is held through a chain of legal entities.
An overseas entity is required to take reasonable steps to identify any registrable beneficial owners before it applies to be included on the ROE and before it provides updated information. If an overseas entity identifies any registrable beneficial owners it must take reasonable steps to obtain the required information about them and, in respect of any registrable beneficial owner who is a trustee, the required information about the trust.
The requirement to take reasonable steps includes a requirement for the overseas entity to serve notice on any person it knows (or has reasonable cause to believe) is a registrable beneficial owner requiring them to confirm the position and to provide the required information about themselves.
An overseas entity also has the power to serve notice on a person where it knows (or has reasonable cause to believe) that they know the identity of a registrable beneficial owner or the identity of a legal entity that is a beneficial owner of the overseas entity, or a person likely to have knowledge of the identity of a registrable beneficial owner or beneficial owner.
The overseas entity must submit certain “required information” in relation to itself and its registrable beneficial owners (if any), or its managing officers if there are no registrable beneficial owners.
The required information to be provided in relation to a registrable beneficial owner will depend on whether they are an individual, a legal entity or a government or public authority. For example, in relation to an individual it will include their name, date of birth, nationality, residential address and any service address. In relation to a legal entity it will include its name, registered or principal office, service address and its legal form and the law by which it is governed.
For all registrable beneficial owners, the required information includes confirmation of whether the individual or entity is a designated person (within the meaning of s9 (2) of the Sanctions and Money Laundering Act 2018) where that information is publicly available, the date on which they became a registrable beneficial owner, which of the conditions for being a registrable beneficial owner is met and why it is met. In the case of individuals and legal entities (other than governments or public authorities) it must also include confirmation of whether the individual or entity meets that condition by virtue of being a trustee.
Where the registrable beneficial owner is a trustee, information about the trust must also be provided.
A UK-regulated agent must conduct verification checks on the required information about the overseas entity itself and its registrable beneficial owners or managing officers.
The agent must be based in the UK and be supervised under the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer of Funds Regulations 2017. This means that they must fall into one of the following categories: credit and financial institutions; auditors, insolvency practitioners, external accountants and tax advisers; independent legal professionals; trust or company service providers; estate agents.
The UK-regulated agent must request in advance an agent assurance code from Companies House. This confirms that the agent has authorisation to file verification statements for an overseas entity. Companies House cannot register an overseas entity without such a code and the verification statement itself.
Verification must be based on documents or information obtained from a reliable source which is independent of the person whose identity is being verified.
The ROE is (largely) a digital service and overseas entities and their agents will usually be required to register online.
The steps required to register include:
Several independent company service providers have announced that they intend to provide registration and verification services for overseas entities. Companies House has stated in guidance that it will be quicker and easier for an application to register an overseas entity to be made by the same UK-regulated agent that carried out the verification checks on that overseas entity.
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Recent tariffs and other trade measures have transformed the international trade landscape, impacting almost every sector, region and business worldwide.
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