• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
location iconSuite 503, 5/F, St. George's Building, 2 Ice House Street, Central, Hong Kongphone-icon +852 2868 0696 linkedintwitterfacebook
OLN IP Services
OLN Online
  • ENG
    • 简
    • 繁
    • FR
    • 日本語
Oldham, Li & Nie
OLN IP Services
close-btn
OLN IP Services
Get bespoke and commercially-driven advice to your Intellectual Property
Learn More
OLN IP Services
OLN Online
close-btn
OLN Online
Powered by Oldham, Li & Nie, the law firm of choice for Hong Kong’s vibrant startup and SME community, OLN Online is a forward-looking and seamless addition to traditional legal services – a true disruptor.
Learn More
OLN IP Services
  • About
        • Awards & Rankings
        • Corporate Social Responsibility
  • Practice Areas
        • Canadian Notarization Services
        • Commercial Fraud & Asset Tracing
        • Elder Law Practice Group
        • Financial Service & Regulatory
        • Insolvency & Restructuring Law
        • Japanese Practice
        • Private Client – Estate Planning & Probate
        • Tax Advisory
        • China Practice
        • Corporate & Commercial Law
        • Employment & Business Immigration Law
        • French Practice
        • Insurance Law
        • Notarial Services
        • Regulatory Compliance, Investigations and Enforcement
        • Chinese Notary Services (CAAO)
        • Dispute Resolution
        • Family Law
        • Fund Practice
        • Intellectual Property Law
        • Personal Injury Law
        • Startups & Venture Capital
        • Canadian Notarization Services
        • China Practice
        • Chinese Notary Services (CAAO)
        • Commercial Fraud and Asset Tracing
        • Corporate and Commercial Law
        • Dispute Resolution
        • Elder Law Practice Group
        • Employment and Business Immigration Law
        • Family Law
        • Financial Service and Regulatory
        • French Practice
        • Fund Practice
        • Insolvency & Restructuring Law
        • Insurance Law
        • Intellectual Property Law
        • Japanese Practice
        • Notarial Services
        • Personal Injury Law
        • Private Client – Estate Planning and Probate
        • Regulatory Compliance, Investigations and Enforcement
        • Startups & Venture Capital
        • Tax Advisory
  • People
  • Insights
  • Offices

Suite 503, St. George's Building,
2 Ice House Street, Central, Hong Kong

Tel. +852 2868 0696 | Send Email
linkedin twitter facebook
OLN Blue

OLN

  • About
    • Awards and Rankings
    • Corporate Social Responsibility
  • Awards and Rankings
  • Block Content Examples
  • Careers
  • Client Information & Registration
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy (EU)
  • Globalaw
  • Offices
  • Oldham, Li & Nie
  • OLN and the Community
  • OLN Podcasts
  • People
  • Practice Areas
  • Privacy Policy
  • Review
  • Reviews
  • Standard Terms of Engagement
  • Test Blog
  • The Firm
  • What Others Say
  • About
        • Awards & Rankings
        • Corporate Social Responsibility
  • Practice Areas
        • Canadian Notarization Services
        • Commercial Fraud & Asset Tracing
        • Elder Law Practice Group
        • Financial Service & Regulatory
        • Insolvency & Restructuring Law
        • Japanese Practice
        • Private Client – Estate Planning & Probate
        • Tax Advisory
        • China Practice
        • Corporate & Commercial Law
        • Employment & Business Immigration Law
        • French Practice
        • Insurance Law
        • Notarial Services
        • Regulatory Compliance, Investigations and Enforcement
        • Chinese Notary Services (CAAO)
        • Dispute Resolution
        • Family Law
        • Fund Practice
        • Intellectual Property Law
        • Personal Injury Law
        • Startups & Venture Capital
        • Canadian Notarization Services
        • China Practice
        • Chinese Notary Services (CAAO)
        • Commercial Fraud and Asset Tracing
        • Corporate and Commercial Law
        • Dispute Resolution
        • Elder Law Practice Group
        • Employment and Business Immigration Law
        • Family Law
        • Financial Service and Regulatory
        • French Practice
        • Fund Practice
        • Insolvency & Restructuring Law
        • Insurance Law
        • Intellectual Property Law
        • Japanese Practice
        • Notarial Services
        • Personal Injury Law
        • Private Client – Estate Planning and Probate
        • Regulatory Compliance, Investigations and Enforcement
        • Startups & Venture Capital
        • Tax Advisory
  • People
  • Insights
  • Offices

Oldham, Li & Nie Excels Once Again in 2025 Chambers’ Greater China Region Guide

Corporate law

Oldham, Li & Nie Excels Once Again in 2025 Chambers’ Greater China Region Guide

February 11, 2025 by OLN Marketing

Oldham, Li & Nie (OLN) has been recognised in the 2025 edition of the Chambers’ Greater China Region Guide for its expertise in Corporate/M&A and Family/Matrimonial law.

The guide also highlights two of our lawyers as leading professionals in the region:

  • Gordon Oldham, Senior Partner – Corporate/M&A
  • Stephen Peaker , Partner, Head of OLN’s Family Law practice – Family/Matrimonial

Client feedback includes:

  • “They gave us practical advice promptly and always gave us fee estimates in advance” 
  • “Both partner and associate have a thorough understanding of complex intertwined agreements and manage against these, providing invaluable knowledge to our business management”
  • “Oldham, Li & Nie are very commercial and take pride in working to tight deadlines and producing their work on time”
  • “Stephen is very hard-working and commercial”

The Chambers Greater China Region Guide conducts annual evaluations of law firms and lawyers across the Greater China Region, assessing factors such as technical legal skills, professionalism, client service, and business acumen.

For more details on OLN’s rankings, visit our profile in the 2025 Chambers Greater China Region Guide.

Filed Under: OLN Tagged With: Corporate law, Public M&A, Family law, Chambers, Greater China Region Guide, Matrimonial

Oldham, Li & Nie is Ranked in Chambers Greater China Region 2024 Guide

January 22, 2024 by OLN Marketing

The newly released 2024 edition of Chambers Greater China Region Guide acknowledged Oldham, Li & Nie in Corporate/M&A and Family/Matrimonial practice areas. Additionally, the Guide has spotlighted four of our lawyers as leading figures in the region’s legal landscape.

Chambers Greater China Region 2024 ranked firm Oldham, Li & Nie

Comments from clients include:

  • “Oldham, Li & Nie are extremely professional and reliable. Their lawyers are worldly, knowledgeable and respectful.”
  • “They are able to give practical advice by considering the circumstances of our company and our company’s primary commercial objectives.”
  • “They are highly professional and well organised. They are very efficient and speedy with their work.”

The four Odham, Li & Nie lawyers recognized among the premier lawyers in the Greater China region are:

  • Gordon Oldham – Corporate/M&A
  • Tracy Yip – Corporate/M&A
  • Richard Healy – Dispute Resolution: Litigation
  • Stephen Peaker – Family/Matrimonial

To view the OLN’s full rankings, visit our profile on 2024 Chambers Greater China Region.

About Chambers Greater China Region Guide

Chambers and Partners interview every year thousands of lawyers, clients and third-party experts to evaluate law firms’ and lawyers’ reputation and expertise in all four jurisdictions of the Greater China Region: PRC, Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan. The Chambers Greater China Region rankings assess various factors, including technical legal skills, professionalism, customer service, and business acumen of the leading lawyers across the region.

Filed Under: OLN, Corporate and Commercial Law, Dispute Resolution, Family Law, News Tagged With: Corporate law, Award, Family law, Dispute Resolution

Benchmark Litigation Once Again Recognises Oldham, Li & Nie

May 16, 2023 by OLN Marketing

We are delighted to share that three of our practice areas have been recognised in the recently released Benchmark Litigation 2023 rankings. Oldham, Li & Nie is once again among the top Family & Matrimonial, Commercial & Transactions and Private Client law firms in Hong Kong.

Our three practice areas are ranked as follows:

  • Commercial and Transactions (domestic firms) – Tier 3
  • Family and Matrimonial – Tier 3
  • Private Client (domestic firms) – Recommended

As one of our referees mentioned, Oldham, Li & Nie is “concise, prompt, honest and provides accurate information for a client to make a decision”

In its analysis, Benchmark Litigation notes “Oldham Li & Nie is active in commercial and transaction-related disputes. The firm is also known for its work in IP and family and probate disputes. The firm frequently acts for ultra-high-net-worth individuals, serial entrepreneurs and corporates. Key names in the firm include commercial litigation partner Richard Healy and family and probate specialist Stephen Peaker.

Commercial dispute cases include representing Natural Seasoning International (HK) in a shareholder dispute for breach of agreement; acting for a prominent Hong Kong distressed asset fund in committal proceedings brought by a claimant in relation to an injunction in aid of the arbitration and a receivership order; and representing two minority shareholders in seeking and rectification of an agreed shareholding in a group of companies located in Hong Kong, PRC and the US”.

Oldham, Li & Nie’s ranking on Benchmark Litigation website.

About Benchmark Litigation

Benchmark Litigation, the definitive guide to the world’s leading litigation firms and lawyers, is the only publication on the market to focus exclusively on dispute resolution.

Since its inception in 2008, the Benchmark brand has grown dramatically and garnered industry-wide accolades as the definitive hub for in-depth analysis of the players shaping the dynamic practice of litigation.

The Asia-Pacific guide officially launched in 2018, with a dedicated team located in Hong Kong and actively researching the market on the ground.

Filed Under: OLN, News Tagged With: Corporate law, Award, Family law, Private Client

Share purchase vs Asset purchase – What are the differences?

April 11, 2023 by OLN Marketing

Introduction

When people contemplate buying a business, the first thing that comes to mind is generally whether to buy the shares of the target company or simply to buy the assets of it. This article aims to highlight the differences between a share purchase and an asset purchase and some points to consider before deciding which route to go for.

A share purchase involves the transfer of the ownership of the shares of a company from the seller to the buyer. As a result, the buyer acquires control over the company and all its assets, liabilities, and obligations. In Hong Kong, the transfer of shares is typically subject to stamp duty, which is payable by both the buyer and the seller. On the other hand, an asset purchase involves the transfer of specific assets and liabilities of a company from the seller to the buyer. The buyer can cherry-pick which assets and liabilities to acquire, and the seller retains the ownership of the remaining assets and liabilities. The actual transfer of assets may be subject to various taxes and duties, depending on the nature of the assets.

Below are some key points that a buyer should take note of before deciding whether a share purchase or an asset purchase best suits his needs. In the following paragraphs, we have assumed the purchase of the entire issued shares or assets of a non-listed Hong Kong company.

Assets and Liabilities

In a share purchase, a buyer buys the shares of the target company while the company remains the owner of its assets. In other words, the target company’s assets and liabilities do not change hand. Hence, if the buyer wishes to buy the entire issued shares of the target company, he should hive off any unwanted liabilities (e.g., loans, accounts payable, etc.) before closing a deal. This is usually done by way of requesting the seller to settle all unwanted liabilities or have them assigned to the sellers before closing, generally by inserting a condition precedent to completion in a Sale and Purchase Agreement (the “SPA”). This ensures that the target company will not continue to hold those unwanted liabilities after the buyer takes over it. Nonetheless, the buyer may still be faced with undisclosed liabilities.

In a business purchase, a buyer is free to choose what assets he wants in order to suit his own business needs. By choosing to buy assets of the target company, the buyer typically does not want to assume the existing liabilities of the target company, and all liabilities remain with the target company. However, a buyer should be aware of the provisions of Transfer of Business (Protection of Creditors) Ordinance (Cap. 49 of the Laws of Hong Kong) (the “TOBO”). Pursuant to the TOBO, the transferee may be held liable for all debts, obligations and liabilities of the transferor arising out of the carrying on of the business notwithstanding that the buyer only takes over the assets but not the liabilities of the target company, unless certain requirements are satisfied (as discussed below)[1].

The seller in an asset purchase is the proprietor of the asset in question, which normally is the operating vehicle of the business. Unless the buyer only purchases part of a business and has no knowledge that the assets he purchased form part of the business[2], the parties should ensure notice is given to the creditors of the seller by publishing a notice of transfer (the “notice”) according to the TOBO. In relation to the notice requirements, a buyer should take note of the followings: –

  • First, the notice must be given not more than 4 months, and not less than 1 month, beforethe date of transfer[3];
  • Second, the notice must be complete at the date of transfer. A notice becomes complete 1 month after its last publication, if no proceedings having been instituted by a creditor of the business[4]; and
  • Third, the notice must include contents prescribed under section 5 of TOBO and published in the Gazette, in 2 Chinese-language newspapers and 1 English-language newspaper as approved by the Chief Secretary for Administration from time to time[5].

If any creditor of the seller objects to the proposed sale of the assets or business, they may apply to court during the period referred above for an order to prevent or delay the transfer of the assets/business.

Third Party’s Consent

Unless an agreement previously entered into by the target company contains a ‘change of control’ provision that requires the other contracting party’s prior consent before any proposed change in control of the target company, third party’s consent is usually not required in a share purchase. For example, an exclusive supply agreement may provide that if the ownership of the supplier changes hands, the agreement shall come to an end. The buyer intending to acquire the exclusive supply, which may form a major part of valuation of the target company, should obtain from the manufacturer a waiver of its right to terminate the agreement. The waiver should also form part of the condition precedent to completion in the SPA to safeguard the interests of buyers.

On the contrary, a business purchase is less neat and tidy. All kinds of contracts forming part of the business the intended buyer is interested in shall be transferred, assigned and novated to the buyer by the seller.

Employment Matters

Typically, in an asset purchase transaction, the buyer will continue to employ the existing employees of the target company. This is done by way of transferring those employees to the buyer’s employment. However, the buyer should take note of two things, first, there is no automatic transfer of employment under Hong Kong laws, those employees must consent to the transfer. Second, the continuity of the period of employment of those employees whom the buyer chooses to offer to re-employ may be preserved according to the Employment Ordinance (Cap. 57 of the Laws of Hong Kong), and this effectively means that the buyer will take up all the payment liabilities arising out of a continuous contract (e.g., severance payment or long service payment) for the period of employment under the seller’s company. However, if a buyer considers not to employ the existing employees of the seller, i.e., the target company, the buyer should ensure that the seller has settled all payment liabilities arising out of the employment of such existing employees, such as making this a condition precedent to completion of the purchase, to avoid any potential hassle or dispute with the seller’s existing employees after the transaction completed. In a share purchase transaction, employees of the target company remain to be employed by the target company and there is no issue of re-hiring of employees. However, if the buyer does not wish to retain certain employees after closing, the buyer should negotiate with the seller in advance and ensure all the employment matters with existing employees have been taken care of before completion.

Tax Implications

The seller in a share purchase is an existing shareholder of the target company. To effect a share transfer, the buyer and the seller shall execute a set of transfer documents (which include instrument of transfer and contract notes). The parties shall submit the original documents to Stamp Office of the Hong Kong Inland Revenue Department for stamp duty adjudication. Before the target company can enter the name of the new shareholders onto its register, the parties shall pay the stamp duty as adjudicated and deliver the stamped transfer documents to the target company. The stamp duty payable is 0.26% of the consideration as stated on the contract notes or the net asset value of the company, whichever is the higher. The buyer in a share purchase transaction may be able to utilize the target company’s tax losses and other tax attributes in the continuing operation of the target company.

Transfer of assets may, on the other hand, subject to various taxes and duties, depending on the nature of the assets purchased.

Conclusion

There is no hard and fast rule on which type of purchase is better, it all depends on the buyer’s preference and business needs. As each deal differs from another, professional advice should be sought at the early stage, and due diligence should be performed to identify risks in the deal. If you have any enquiries about the subject matter of this article, please contact our Mr. Simon Wong for further discussion.

Disclaimer: This article is for general reference only. Nothing herein shall be construed as legal advice. Oldham, Li & Nie and the author shall not be held liable for any loss and/or damage incurred by any person acting as a result of the content of this article.


[1] Sections 3 and 4 of Cap. 49

[2] Section 3(2) of Cap. 49

[3] Section 4(1) of Cap. 49

[4] Section 4(4) of Cap. 49

[5] Section 5(3), Cap. 49

Filed Under: Corporate and Commercial Law, News Tagged With: Corporate law

Oldham, Li & Nie Advises on an Award-Winning Deal

March 8, 2023 by OLN Marketing

Oldham, Li & Nie has advised on the deal ESR purchase of logistics assets from DLJ which has been recognised by the China Business Law Journal (CBLJ) as one of the “Deals of the Year 2022” in the category “Cross-border deals”.

The deal relates to the purchase by ESR, the largest real estate manager in the Asia-Pacific, of an 11-asset portfolio from US-based DLJ Real Estate Capital Partners for RMB4.4 billion (USD656 million).

The portfolio, consisting of logistics and industrial assets spanning 550,000 square metres of gross floor area cross the Yangtze River Delta ‒ including Shanghai, Kunshan, Suzhou, Taicang and Hangzhou ‒ is the largest of its kind sold in the “greater Shanghai” area.

Oldham Li & Nie acted as Hong Kong legal counsel to ESR, the deal was led by our Consultant Cermain Cheung and Associate Phyllis Wong.

Learn more about the winning deals – https://law.asia/deals-china-2022/

About China Business Law Journal

China Business Law Journal is a fully bilingual (simplified Chinese and English) monthly magazine for China-focused business and legal practitioners. CBLJ selects the deals of the years that stand out for their “overall significance, complexity, innovative nature and deal size”.

Filed Under: OLN, China Practice, Corporate and Commercial Law, News Tagged With: Corporate law, Cross Border, Business Law, Deal of the Year, CBLJ, China Business

Oldham, Li & Nie contributed to the Lexology Getting The Deal Through (GTDT) series – Public M&A Hong Kong

December 5, 2022 by OLN Marketing

The Lexology GTDT – Public M&A guide has been published. Our Partner Simon Wong prepared the Hong Kong chapter for the guide.

This reference guide enabling side-by-side comparison of local insights into public M&A issues worldwide, including types of business combination; principal laws and regulations; cross-border and sector-specific considerations; governing laws; filing and disclosure requirements; duties of directors and controlling shareholders; shareholder approval and appraisal rights; hostile transactions; break-up fees and frustration of additional bidders; government influence; conditional offers; financing; minority squeeze-outs; waiting and notification periods; tax; labour and employee benefits; restructuring, bankruptcy or receivership; anti-bribery, anti-corruption and sanctions issues; and recent trends.

Read and download the whole chapter below.

Download the Lexology Getting the Deal Through (GTDT) Public M&A Hong Kong Chapter

Filed Under: Corporate and Commercial Law, News Tagged With: Corporate law, Public M&A

Primary Sidebar

This website uses cookies to optimise your experience and to collect information to customise content. By closing this banner, clicking a link or continuing to browse otherwise, you agree to the use of cookies. Please read the cookies section of our Privacy Policy to learn more. Learn more

Footer

OLN logo

Suite 503, 5/F, St. George's Building 2 Ice House Street, Central, Hong Kong

Tel. +852 2868 0696 | Email us
About People Offices OLN IP Services Privacy Policy
Practice Areas Insights Careers OLN Online
About Practice Areas People Insights Offices
Careers OLN IP Services OLN Online Privacy Policy Home
linkedin twitter facebook
OLN logo

© 2025 Oldham, Li & Nie. All Rights Reserved.

Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}
OLN IP Services

Get bespoke and commercially-driven advice to your Intellectual Property
Learn More
OLN IP Services
OLN Online

Powered by Oldham, Li & Nie, the law firm of choice for Hong Kong’s vibrant startup and SME community, OLN Online is a forward-looking and seamless addition to traditional legal services – a true disruptor.
Learn More
OLN IP Services
Contact Us

Please share the details of your message here.
We will be in touch shortly.

    x