Mergers and Acquisitions in Thailand

Mergers and acquisitions in Thailand are key drivers of corporate growth, market consolidation, and foreign direct investment. They offer opportunities for companies to expand, diversify, or restructure. However, M&A transactions in Thailand are governed by a complex legal and regulatory framework that requires careful structuring, due diligence, and compliance to succeed.

This article provides an in-depth analysis of the legal structures, regulatory requirements, procedural steps, and practical considerations for M&A in Thailand.

Legal Framework

M&A activities in Thailand are primarily governed by:

  • Civil and Commercial Code (CCC) — general rules on contracts, partnerships, and company law.

  • Public Limited Companies Act B.E. 2535 (1992) — for M&A involving public companies.

  • Securities and Exchange Act B.E. 2535 (1992) — for transactions involving listed companies; includes tender offer rules.

  • Trade Competition Act B.E. 2560 (2017) — merger control and antitrust considerations.

  • Foreign Business Act B.E. 2542 (1999) — restrictions on foreign ownership in certain sectors.

  • Sector-specific laws (e.g., Financial Institutions Business Act, Insurance Act).

Common M&A Structures

1️⃣ Share Acquisition

The acquirer purchases shares in the target company, obtaining ownership and control indirectly through the shareholding structure.

  • Advantages:

    • Simpler transfer of control.

    • Contracts, licenses, and assets generally stay with the target.

  • Disadvantages:

    • Buyer assumes existing liabilities (known and unknown).

    • Due diligence is critical to identify hidden risks.

2️⃣ Asset or Business Transfer

The acquirer purchases specific assets or business undertakings of the target entity.

  • Advantages:

    • Selective acquisition of desired assets and liabilities.

    • Avoidance of hidden liabilities.

  • Disadvantages:

    • Need to assign/novate contracts.

    • Individual transfer of licenses, permits, and registrations.

    • Potential tax inefficiency.

3️⃣ Amalgamation (Merger)

Two or more companies combine to form a new entity, or one company absorbs another under CCC Sections 1237–1243.

  • Requires:

    • Shareholder approval (usually 75% of votes at a general meeting).

    • Registration with the Ministry of Commerce (MOC).

  • All rights, liabilities, and obligations transfer by operation of law.

Regulatory Approvals and Restrictions

Trade Competition Act (Merger Control)

Merger transactions that may substantially lessen competition are subject to:

  • Pre-merger approval: Required where the merger may create or enhance market dominance (combined market share ≥50% and turnover ≥1 billion THB).

  • Post-merger notification: Required for other significant mergers (combined turnover ≥1 billion THB).

Foreign Business Act

Foreign parties (≥50% foreign shareholding or control) may not engage in certain restricted activities (e.g., services, agriculture) without:

  • Foreign Business License or

  • BOI promotion (Board of Investment)

A share acquisition by a foreign buyer may trigger foreign status under the FBA.

Sector-Specific Approvals

Certain industries require regulator consent (examples):

  • Bank of Thailand — for financial institutions.

  • Office of Insurance Commission — for insurance companies.

  • NBTC — for telecom operators.

Due Diligence

Robust due diligence is essential, covering:

  • Corporate: Shareholder structure, articles, minutes, compliance.

  • Financial: Liabilities, tax compliance, accounting.

  • Operational: Material contracts, licenses, assets, employment.

  • Litigation: Existing and potential claims.

  • Environmental/Zoning: Real property use compliance.

Findings guide the transaction structure, pricing, and warranty protections.

Procedural Steps

1️⃣ Preliminary agreement — Letter of intent (LOI) or memorandum of understanding (MoU), often including exclusivity and confidentiality provisions.

2️⃣ Due diligence — Legal, financial, operational reviews.

3️⃣ Negotiation and drafting — Sale and purchase agreements, merger plan, disclosure schedules.

4️⃣ Regulatory filings and approvals — Trade Competition Commission, sector regulators.

5️⃣ Shareholder meetings — Required for amalgamations or major asset sales.

6️⃣ Closing — Transfer of shares/assets, payment, registration with the MOC or other authorities.

7️⃣ Post-closing integration — Corporate housekeeping, license updates, employee transfers.

Tax Implications

Share Deals

  • Capital gains on share sales are taxable in Thailand.

  • Stamp duty of 0.1% on the higher of sale price or paid-up value of shares.

Asset Deals

  • Subject to VAT (7%) unless exempt (e.g., entire business transfer with conditions).

  • Land and building transfers: subject to transfer fee (2%), specific business tax (3.3%), and income tax withholding.

Amalgamation

  • Often tax neutral, but tax benefits depend on compliance with Revenue Department conditions.

  • All tax liabilities of merged entities transfer to the surviving entity.

Employment Considerations

  • Share deal: Employment contracts continue automatically.

  • Asset/business transfer or amalgamation: Employee consent may be required; severance obligations may arise if employment terminates.

Employers must honor accrued benefits and service continuity if employees are retained.

Common Challenges

Foreign ownership limitations

  • M&A structures need careful planning to comply with FBA restrictions.

Merger control

  • Trade Competition Commission clearance may take several months.

Tax efficiency

  • Transaction design impacts tax liabilities significantly.

Assignment of contracts

  • In asset deals, third-party consent may be needed for contract novation.

Cultural and operational integration

  • Especially important in cross-border M&A.

Enforcement of M&A Agreements

Thai law generally enforces well-drafted M&A agreements. Disputes may be resolved through:

  • Thai courts (Civil Court, IP&IT Court if cross-border elements).

  • Arbitration (often preferred in cross-border deals; Thailand is a New York Convention member).

Timeline

  • Simple share acquisition (private companies): 2–3 months.

  • Public company takeover: 6–12 months (includes tender offer process).

  • Merger/amalgamation: 4–8 months (due to shareholder and regulatory approvals).

  • Asset deals: Varies depending on contract novation and license transfers.

Example Case

👉 A Singaporean company acquires 60% of a Thai services company. The acquisition triggers FBA restrictions. The parties apply for a Foreign Business License, which takes six months. During this time, the deal is structured as an asset purchase for unregulated activities, with a deferred share acquisition pending license approval.

Conclusion

Mergers and acquisitions in Thailand are governed by a complex interplay of corporate, competition, foreign investment, and sector-specific laws. Success in Thai M&A requires careful structuring, thorough due diligence, attention to regulatory compliance, and practical integration planning. Early legal and tax advice is critical to navigate these challenges and achieve a smooth transaction.

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