Publication
Government Investigations in Singapore 2025
We have contributed the Singapore chapter of Getting the Deal Through, Government Investigations 2025.
Middle East | Publication | March 2024
The new Digital Assets Law No 2 of 2024 (the Digital Assets Law) was enacted in the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) on 8 March 2024, alongside significant supporting amendments to existing legislation.
The Digital Assets Law sets out the legal characteristics of digital assets for the purposes of property law, and specifies how digital assets may be controlled, transferred and dealt with by parties.
The changes follow a public consultation by way of Consultation Paper No. 4 in September 2023 and an extensive benchmarking by the DIFC of the legal approaches taken to digital assets in multiple jurisdictions. The legislation significantly enhances the DIFC’s securities regime and brings greater clarity, certainty and security for digital asset investors and users.
Digital Assets are a growing asset class with a considerable scope for future innovation and new market opportunities, particularly in asset tokenisation. However, there has been a lack of certainty regarding the precise legal nature of Digital Assets as far as legislation is concerned. Of course, courts across the common law world have, to some extent, recognised Digital Assets as property – but these judgments are not binding in the DIFC. This is the problem that the DIFC has set out to solve through the Digital Assets Law.
Section 8 of the Digital Assets Law sets out to solve this problem by clearly defining a Digital Asset as a thing that:
“(a) exists as a notional quantity unit manifested by the combination of the active operation of software by a network of participants and network-instantiated data;
(b) exists independently of any particular person and legal system; and
(c)is not capable of duplication and use or consumption of the thing by one person or specific group of persons necessarily prejudices the use or consumption of that thing by one or more other persons.”
Section 9 of the Digital Assets Law further provides that a Digital Asset is intangible property, something that is neither a thing in possession nor a thing in action. The Digital Assets law also sets out the conditions required for a person to be considered to have control of a Digital Asset, and how title can pass.
These changes are significant and represent the first time that clarity as to the legal nature of Digital Assets has been provided in the form of legislation. The changes will serve to make the DIFC a more attractive jurisdiction for those in the blockchain infrastructure sector.
Numerous laws have been amended to cater to specific issues arising in relation to Digital Assets, including:
The new laws reflect the DIFC’s commitment to maintaining a transparent and robust legal and regulatory framework aligned with global best practice. The legislation is designed to keep pace with the rapid developments in the digital asset space and international trade and financial markets and reflects the DIFC’s desire to support growth in these areas by providing greater legal certainty for investors and users.
The new Digital Assets Law can be accessed via the DIFC’s Legislative Database here.
Publication
We have contributed the Singapore chapter of Getting the Deal Through, Government Investigations 2025.
Publication
The private credit market and direct lending have grown and diversified immensely in the past decade, offering alternative sources and terms of debt compared to those historically provided by the syndicated leveraged loan and public issuance markets. Consequently, they are fast becoming pivotal components in the capital ecosystem, so much so that the Bank of England consider that the private credit market is currently responsible for approximately $1.8 trillion of debt issuance, which is four times its size in 2015. This growth has been particularly pronounced in Europe and the US but there has also been significant activity in Asia.
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The EU’s Artificial Intelligence Regulation, commonly referred to as the AI Act, is expected to come into force during the summer of 2024 (the AI Act). The AI Act will be the first comprehensive legal framework for the use and development of artificial intelligence (AI), and is intended to ensure that AI systems developed and used in the EU are safe, transparent, traceable, non-discriminatory and environmentally friendly.
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