UKLR 8.1 Preliminary
Application
1This chapter applies to a company that has a listing of equity shares in the equity shares (commercial companies) category.
Purpose
1The purpose of this chapter is to set out governance and notification requirements for a listed company in relation to related party transactions. These requirements are intended to:
- (1)
ensure that the shareholders of companies with listed equity shares are notified of related party transactions when they are entered into by the listed company, and support engagement between the listed company and its shareholders in relation to related party transactions; and
- (2)
enhance market transparency in relation to related party transactions.
1These requirements are also intended to prevent a related party from taking advantage of its position and prevent any perception that it may have done so.
Sponsors
1A listed company that is proposing to enter into a related party transaction requiring the listed company to make a notification under UKLR 8.2.1R(4) must comply with the requirement to appoint a sponsor under UKLR 8.2.1R(3).
1A listed company must appoint a sponsor where it proposes to make a request to the FCA to modify, waive or substitute the operation of UKLR 8.
1A listed company must appoint a sponsor where it proposes to make a request to the FCA for individual guidance in relation to the listing rules, the disclosure requirements or the transparency rules in connection with a related party transaction.
Definition of ‘related party transaction’
1In UKLR, a related party transaction means:
- (1)
a transaction (other than a transaction in the ordinary course of business) between a listed company and a related party;
- (2)
an arrangement (other than an arrangement in the ordinary course of business) pursuant to which a listed company and a related party each invests in, or provides finance to, another undertaking or asset; or
- (3)
any other similar transaction or arrangement (other than a transaction or arrangement in the ordinary course of business) between a listed company and any other person, the purpose and effect of which is to benefit a related party.
1A related party transaction includes the variation or novation of an existing agreement between the listed company and a related party, regardless of whether the party was a related party at the time the original agreement was entered into.
Meaning of ‘transaction’ or ‘arrangement’
1A reference in this chapter:
- (1)
to a transaction or arrangement by a listed company includes a transaction or arrangement by its subsidiary undertaking;
- (2)
to a transaction or arrangement is, unless the contrary intention appears, a reference to the entering into of the agreement for the transaction or the entering into of the arrangement; and
- (3)
to a transaction or arrangement includes a transaction or arrangement which amends or revises the terms of an existing transaction or arrangement.
Transactions to which this chapter does not apply
1 UKLR 8.2.1R to UKLR 8.2.5R do not apply to a related party transaction if it is a transaction or arrangement:
- (1)
of a kind referred to in paragraph 1 of UKLR 8 Annex 1 (a transaction the terms of which were agreed before a person became a related party); or
- (2)
of a kind referred to in paragraphs 2 to 8 of UKLR 8 Annex 1 and does not have any unusual features.
Definition of ‘related party’
1In UKLR, a related party means:
- (1)
a person who is (or was within the 12 months before the date of the transaction or arrangement) a substantial shareholder;
- (2)
a person who is (or was within the 12 months before the date of the transaction or arrangement) a director or shadow director of:
- (a)
the listed company; or
- (b)
any other company which is one of the following (and, if that person has ceased to a director or shadow director, any other company which was one of the following while that person was a director or shadow director of such other company);
- (i)
a subsidiary undertaking of the listed company;
- (ii)
a parent undertaking of the listed company; or
- (iii)
a fellow subsidiary undertaking of a parent undertaking of the listed company;
- (i)
- (a)
- (3)
- (4)
an associate of a related party referred to in paragraph (1), (2) or (3).
Definition of ‘substantial shareholder’
1In UKLR, a substantial shareholder means any person who is entitled to exercise, or to control the exercise of, 20% or more of the votes able to be cast on all or substantially all matters at general meetings of:
- (1)
the company; or
- (2)
any company which is:
- (a)
a subsidiary undertaking of the company;
- (b)
a parent undertaking of the company; or
- (c)
a fellow subsidiary undertaking of a parent undertaking of the company.
- (a)
1For the purposes of calculating voting rights in UKLR 8.1.12R, the following voting rights are to be disregarded:
- (1)
any voting rights which such a person exercises (or controls the exercise of) independently in its capacity as:
- (a)
bare trustee;
- (b)
investment manager;
- (c)
collective investment undertaking; or
- (d)
a long-term insurer in respect of its linked long-term business,
if no associate of that person interferes by giving direct or indirect instructions, or in any other way, in the exercise of such voting rights (except to the extent any such person confers or collaborates with such an associate which also acts in its capacity as investment manager, collective investment undertaking or long-term insurer); or
- (a)
- (2)
any voting rights:
- (a)
which a person may hold (or control the exercise of) solely in relation to the direct performance, by way of business, of:
- (i)
underwriting the issue or sale of securities;
- (ii)
placing securities, where the person provides a firm commitment to acquire any securities which it does not place; or
- (iii)
acquiring securities from existing shareholders or the issuer pursuant to an agreement to procure third-party purchases of securities; and
- (i)
- (b)
where the conditions in (i) to (iv) are satisfied:
- (i)
the activities set out in (2)(a) are performed in the ordinary course of business;
- (ii)
the securities to which the voting rights attach are held for a consecutive period of 5 trading days or less, beginning with the first trading day on which the securities are held;
- (iii)
the voting rights are not exercised within the period in which the securities are held; and
- (iv)
no attempt is made directly or indirectly by the firm to intervene in or exert influence on (or attempt to intervene in or exert influence on) the management of the issuer within the period the securities are held.
- (i)
- (a)
Meaning of ‘ordinary course of business’
- (1)
1The assessment of whether a transaction is in the ordinary course of business under this chapter will depend on the specific circumstances of the listed company.
- (2)
Factors that may indicate whether a transaction is in the ordinary course of a company’s business include:
- (a)
the size and incidence of similar transactions which the company has entered into;
- (b)
the nature and size of the company’s existing business and common factors within the industry sector in which it operates;
- (c)
the company’s corporate strategy for its business, including in relation to growth and industry focus, as set out in the company’s latest published prospectus or annual financial report;
- (d)
the existing accounting treatment (for a disposal) or planned accounting treatment (for an acquisition or new arrangement) by the listed company; and
- (e)
whether its shareholders could reasonably expect the company to enter into the transaction, taking into account:
- (i)
the factors in (a) to (d);
- (ii)
any further information that the company has already notified to a RIS;
- (iii)
the subject matter of the transaction;
- (iv)
the terms of the transaction;
- (v)
the anticipated impact on the listed company; and
- (vi)
the associated benefits and risks.
- (i)
- (a)
1Transactions that are likely to be in the ordinary course of business include:
- (1)
regular trading activities (if the company is a trading company);
- (2)
ongoing commercial arrangements and purchases commonly undertaken as part of the existing business or within the industry sector in which the company operates;
- (3)
capital expenditure to support and maintain the existing business and its infrastructure;
- (4)
capital expenditure to add scale to the existing business in line with the company’s business strategy as previously notified to a RIS (including, for example, within the latest published prospectus or annual financial report); or
- (5)
in the case of a listed property company, where the accounting treatment of a property that is acquired or disposed is such that:
1Transactions that are unlikely to be in the ordinary course of business include:
- (1)
mergers with, or acquisitions of, other businesses (whether structured by way of a share or asset acquisition);
- (2)
transactions that would lead to a substantial involvement in a business activity that did not previously form a significant part of the listed company’s principal activities;
- (3)
transactions that would lead to the listed company no longer having a substantial involvement in a business activity that forms a significant part of its principal activities; or
- (4)
transactions which are entered into to alleviate financial difficulty.
1For the purposes of this chapter, a transaction in the ordinary course of business excludes a reverse takeover.
Where a related party transaction is also a significant transaction or other transaction under UKLR 7
1Where a related party transaction is also a significant transaction or is otherwise subject to UKLR 7, the requirements and guidance under UKLR 7 also apply, in addition to the requirements under this chapter.