Regulations on conversion of state-owned enterprises 100is legal content that readers often need to check carefully before implementing it in practice. This article has been systematized by ANT Legal in an easy-to-understand manner, helping individuals and businesses understand the main issues, common risks and appropriate solutions.
Will the proceeds from converting an enterprise with 100% charter capital held by the State into a limited liability company with two or more members be paid to the state budget?
Related service · P1
M&A, Equity Transfer and Project Transfer
If you are preparing an equity transfer, M&A transaction, project transfer or restructuring, ANT Legal can help review legal risks and transaction structure.
1. Will the proceeds from converting an enterprise with 100% charter capital held by the State into a limited liability company with two or more members be paid to the state budget?
Compare with the provisions inArticle 38 Decree 23/2022/ND-CP Regulations on the management and use of proceeds from converting enterprises with 100% charter capital held by the State into limited liability companies with two or more members:
Accordingly, the proceeds from converting an enterprise with 100% charter capital held by the State into a limited liability company with two or more members must be paid to the central budget and local budget according to the Government’s regulations in case the following expenses have been deducted:
– Business conversion costs;
– Policy implementation costs for employees and people holding leadership and management positions.
2. Based on what basis to build the charter capital structure in the plan to convert an enterprise with 100% charter capital held by the State into a limited liability company with two or more members?
According to the provisions of Article 35 of Decree 23/2022/ND-CP stipulating the content of the Plan to convert enterprises with 100% charter capital held by the State into limited liability companies with two or more members:
Accordingly, one of the important contents in the conversion plan is the charter capital structure, starting price and method of transferring capital.
So the basis for building the charter capital structure, starting price and method of transferring capital in the plan to convert an enterprise with 100% charter capital held by the State into a limited liability company with two or more members is:
– Based on the scale, nature of business lines and enterprise development requirements, determine specifically the minimum amount of capital that investors must subscribe to ensure the number of members does not exceed 50 members according to the provisions of law on enterprises.
Because, according to the provisions of Clause 1, Article 46 of the Law on Enterprises 2020, a limited liability company with two members becomes a limited liability company with two members. up is an enterprise with from 02 to 50 members who are organizations and individuals.
Note: Regulating the minimum purchase level in the conversion plan, does not discriminate between investors of all economic sectors.
In addition, the conversion plan also includes the following basic contents:
– Current status of the enterprise at the time of determining the enterprise value.
– Determination results enterprise value and issues that need to be further handled.
– Criteria for selecting investors to receive the transfer of State capital related to business lines, fields of operation, financial capacity, corporate governance, technology and market.
– charter capital level according to the requirements of the enterprise’s production and business activities.
– Draft Organization Charter The organization and operation of a limited liability company with two or more members according to the provisions of the Enterprise Law and current legal documents.
– Plan for rearranging labor under management.
– Plan for production and business activities in the next 3-5 years.
– Plan for land use approved by competent authorities browse.
3. Who is responsible for carrying out the registration procedure for converting into a limited liability company with two or more members?
According to the provisions of Clause 3, Article 36 of Decree 23/2022/ND-CP, who is responsible for carrying out the registration procedure for converting an enterprise with 100% charter capital held by the State into a limited liability company with two or more members? is:
An enterprise with 100% charter capital held by the State.
Note: Business registration documents shall comply with the Government’s regulations on business registration.
In which the transfer contract or documents proving the completion of the transfer are replaced by the decision of the owner’s representative agency to announce the actual value of the state capital in the enterprise after selling the state capital, and the decision to appoint a representative for the state capital of the owner’s representative agency (if any).
In addition, enterprises with 100% charter capital held by the State also have Some of the responsibilities for implementing the conversion are as follows:
– Proactively prepare documents and records to develop a conversion plan; Organize the handling of financial issues and determine enterprise value according to the provisions of law;
– Submit to the owner’s representative agency to decide or approve according to its authority the contents specified in Point b, Clause 1, Article 36 of Decree 23/2022/ND-CP (for enterprises established by the Prime Minister) or Point a, Clause 2, Article 36 of the Decree. 23/2022/ND-CP (for enterprises established or assigned to manage by the owner’s representative agency).
– Sign a contract to hire a business valuation consultant, organize an auction of state capital as authorized by the owner’s representative agency;
– Organize the implementation of the Plan and complete the conversion into a limited liability company with two or more members.
Note on Applying Current Legal Regulations
This article belongs to the Business & M&A group and is presented for reference purposes, helping readers understand the legal issue at an overview level before preparing a dossier or carrying out a transaction.
Legal regulations may vary depending on the timing, locality, type of dossier and specific circumstances. If you need to determine the exact legal basis applicable to your case, you should contact ANT Legal’s lawyers at 0966.475.966 for review and advice before proceeding.
Common Legal Risks to Note
- Applying legal instruments that have been amended, supplemented or replaced.
- Preparing an incomplete set of documents, materials or necessary evidence.
- Misunderstanding the conditions, procedure, timeline or competent authority.
- Signing, submitting a dossier or carrying out a transaction before fully assessing legal risks.
How Can ANT Legal Support You?
ANT Legal can review the specific circumstances, examine the dossier, identify the applicable legal basis, advise on an appropriate handling plan and represent clients in working with individuals, organizations or competent authorities where necessary.
For prompt advice, you may contact a lawyer at 0966.475.966.
Related Articles
- Do software manufacturing enterprises need confirmation from the Ministry of Information and Communications to enjoy corporate income tax incentives?
- Are shareholders allowed to withdraw capital from the joint stock company? in the form of a company repurchasing shares or not according to regulations?
- Are minutes of meetings of the Board of Directors of a joint stock company required to be kept at the company’s headquarters?
- When is the change in legal status when an enterprise temporarily suspends business?
- Can capital contributors in a partnership company conduct business on behalf of the company?
Practical points to review
For the topic “Regulations on converting enterprises with 100% charter capital held by the State into limited liability companies with two or more members”, readers should compare the legal rule with the actual documents, parties involved, timeline and evidence before choosing a course of action.
- Identify the legal relationship, signing authority and documents creating rights or obligations.
- Check deadlines, notices, payment records, approvals and evidence that may affect the legal position.
- Assess whether negotiation, document correction, complaint, arbitration, court proceedings or another route is suitable.
Documents to prepare
- Contracts, annexes, decisions, notices, emails, messages, payment records and handover/acceptance minutes where relevant.
- Enterprise, asset, license or identity documents connected to the matter.
- A short timeline of key events and the outcome expected from the review.
When to seek legal advice
If the matter has high value, strict deadlines, multiple parties, unclear evidence or potential dispute risk, consider discussing the file with ANT Legal before signing, responding or filing a claim.
Related service: ANT Legal services. You may also contact ANT Legal through the official website.
This content is for general reference only and does not replace legal advice for a specific file. A service relationship is formed only after scope and fees are agreed.
