Legal services:

Comprehensive legal solutions for contracts, disputes, and compliance. Our expert team ensures legal protection and strategic guidance for your business.

AML consulting:

Specialised AML consulting to develop and maintain robust anti-money laundering policies. We assess risks, offer ongoing support and provide tailored AML services.

Obtaining a crypto license:

We offer licensing and ongoing support for your crypto-business. We also offer licences in the most popular jurisdictions.

Registration of legal entities:

Efficient legal entity registration support. We manage documentation and interaction with the authorities, ensuring a seamless process for establishing your business.

Opening bank accounts:

We facilitate the opening of bank accounts through our extensive network of partners (European banks). Hassle-free process, tailored to your business needs.

COREDO TEAM

Nikita Veremeev
Nikita Veremeev
CEO
Pavel Kos
Pavel Kos
Head of the legal department
Grigorii Lutcenko
Grigorii Lutcenko
Head of AML department
Annet Abdurzakova
Annet Abdurzakova
Senior Customer Success Manager
Basang Ungunov
Basang Ungunov
Lawyer at Legal Department
Egor Pykalev
Egor Pykalev
AML consultant
Yulia Zhidikhanova
Yulia Zhidikhanova
Customer Success Associate
Diana Alchaeva
Diana Alchaeva
Customer Success Associate
Johann Schneider
Johann Schneider
Lawyer
Daniil Saprykin
Daniil Saprykin
Head of Customer Success Department

Our clients

COREDO’s clients are manufacturers, traders and financial companies, as well as wealthy clients from European and CIS countries.

Effective communication and fast project realisation guarantee satisfaction of our customers.

Exactly
Unitpay
Grispay
Newreality
Chicrypto
Xchanger
CONVERTIQ
Crypto Engine
Pion
Since 2016 I have been leading COREDO as a company whose DNA includes international company registration, licensing of financial services, AML consulting and comprehensive business support. We meet clients’ needs in the EU, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus, Estonia, the United Kingdom, Singapore and Dubai. Over these years the COREDO team has implemented dozens of projects for entering new capital markets. And today I want to talk about Brazil – one of the most interesting and demanding jurisdictions for asset management and direct investments.

B3 and Brazil’s investment potential

Brazil: the largest market in Latin America with the deep exchange infrastructure of B3, active debt and derivatives segments, a strong agricultural sector and infrastructure construction. Investments in Brazil are attractive to foreigners because of the combination of scale, diversification and returns. But real access to this potential begins where CVM regulation, the requirements of the Banco Central do Brasil and the actual enforcement of compliance at the ANBIMA and COAF level converge. COREDO’s experience confirms: proper structuring at the outset saves months, and sometimes years.

Why Brazil Is in the Spotlight for Managers

Illustration for the section «Why Brazil Is in the Spotlight for Managers» in the article «Asset Management in Brazil for Foreign Managers»

Our experience at COREDO has shown that demand is driven by three clusters: private capital (private equity and venture via FIP and FIA), debt strategies (FIDC, debuts of mid-market issuers), and also real estate and infrastructure (FII and project SPVs). Brazilian macroeconomics is cyclical, but long-term trends — urbanization, agro-exports, logistics — provide a clear basis for assessing ROI. Indexation of rental and concession payments often involves the IPCA, and for commercial contracts IGP-M is encountered, which affects cash flows and covenants.

Currency risk in Brazil

Currency risk in Brazil is critical. The real (BRL) is volatile, and the cost of hedging changes with the DI curve and the dollar rate. For long-term portfolios we design a hedging strategy based on forwards, swaps and options, test it under stress scenarios and model VaR. The solution developed at COREDO links currency policy to the fund’s liquidity and redemption rules (redemption policy) to avoid a gap between the liquidity promised to investors and the ability to hedge.

Entry strategy from holding to fund

Illustration for the section "Entry strategy from holding to fund" in the article "Asset management in Brazil for foreign managers"

A sound structure determines taxes, access to capital and operating costs. In simple cases we use an onshore company in Brazil and a controlling holding in Europe, more often in Luxembourg, which is convenient for fund structures and the DTA network. In more flexible configurations we add offshore jurisdictions (Cayman, BVI) for LP structures where appropriate based on investor profile and reporting.

Legal form of the special-purpose vehicle: Ltd. or S.A.

For investment projects, Sociedade Limitada (Ltda.) and Sociedade Anônima (S.A.) are generally suitable. Ltda. is easier to manage and fits SPVs and joint ventures when speed and control matter. S.A. is appropriate when attracting institutional investors, issuing securities and for more complex corporate governance. In COREDO projects we document corporate rights through an SHA (shareholders’ agreement), set up drag/tag-along, distribution rules, covenants, and also use escrow agreements and clear SPA mechanics on entry/exit.

For joint ventures (JV) with Brazilian partners I insist on transparent allocation of reserved matters and compliance obligations. Trust management contracts and powers of attorney (procuração) in Brazilian law require careful definition of the manager’s powers and the procedure for revocation. This reduces the risk of disputed interpretations and speeds up operational decisions.

Onshore vs offshore: CFC and DTA

Holding structures onshore vs offshore differ by taxation, reporting and by how banks and regulators perceive them. Tax planning for foreign investors in Brazil must take into account the double taxation agreement (DTA), controlled foreign company (CFC) rules in the investor’s country of residence and the risk of creating a permanent establishment (permanente estabelecimento, PE). We build into the model the allocation of functions, risks and assets between structure levels and document this in transfer pricing (preços de transferência) to reduce claims.

COREDO’s practice confirms that early checking against international CFC rules (for example, on a fund’s passive income) often changes the choice of holding country. We analyze taxation regimes for dividends, interest and capital gains, as well as conditions for repatriation of profits from Brazil, so that the final IRR reflects real cash flows after taxes and IOF.

Company registration in Brazil

Company registration in Brazil for a foreign manager begins with selecting an address, articles of association and appointing a local representative. CNPJ is required for the legal entity and CPF for authorized individuals. Foreign investments are registered in RDE-IED through the Banco Central do Brasil, which is critical for lawful repatriation of capital and dividends. The COREDO team assists with document preparation, apostille and their submission through electronic portals, synchronizing the process with opening bank accounts and choosing a custodian.

Access to the capital market: CVM, ANBIMA, B3

Illustration for the section 'Access to the capital market: CVM, ANBIMA, B3' in the article 'Asset management in Brazil for foreign managers'

When navigating entry to the Brazilian capital market, it’s important to consider the requirements and functions of key institutions such as CVM, ANBIMA and B3. Below we explain step by step which legal, operational and registration actions a foreign manager will need to gain access and comply with local rules.

How a foreign manager can gain access to the Brazilian capital market

Access to the capital market runs through the Comissão de Valores Mobiliários (CVM). Registration of the manager with the CVM and Licensing and registration of managers of foreign funds in Brazil require proving organizational structure, risk management procedures, compliance and independent control. We prepare policies, descriptions of the investment process, a conflicts of interest matrix and DR plans, relying on ANBIMA standards.

Some strategies allow operating under an advisory model with a local licensee or a sub-advice structure. I suggest comparing models by total cost of ownership: registration timelines, staffing requirements, directors’ liability, as well as the effect on fund expenses and time-to-market.

Setting up a fund in Brazil

When setting up a fund in Brazil (fundos de investimento) the key choice is the legal wrapper: FIP for private equity, FIDC for securitization of receivables, FII for real estate, FIA for public equity. The fund type dictates requirements for diversification, NAV valuation, permissible assets and disclosure levels. We select an administrator, custodian, auditor and transfer agent, and also design the NAV calculation and CVM disclosure processes.

COREDO helps formulate a liquidity management policy and redemption policy if the structure is open. We link the calculation of management fee, performance fee and carried interest to the fund’s objectives and market practice. This helps to pass institutional LP questionnaires and comply with ANBIMA standards on transparency.

Custody and clearing through B3

How to organize custody and clearing through B3 is a practical question in the first month. We carry out Due Diligence of custodial banks, assessing their experience with foreign managers, reporting functionality, SLAs for corporate events and real-time monitoring capabilities. B3’s clearing infrastructure and settlement systems set operational windows; this affects cut-offs for orders, the handling of corporate actions and voting procedures.

The selection and responsibilities of custodian banks in Brazil are regulated in detail. The solution developed at COREDO combines vendor controls, a checklist of CVM and ANBIMA requirements and resiliency scenarios to reduce operational risk.

Compliance and AML in Brazil

Illustration for the section "Compliance and AML in Brazil" in the article "Asset Management in Brazil for Foreign Managers"

In the context of Compliance and AML in Brazil, asset managers need to establish a reliable client and risk control system. Understanding KYC procedures, the differences between CDD and EDD, and correct identification of beneficial ownership are key elements of this system, ensuring regulatory compliance and reducing operational risks.

KYC, CDD/EDD and beneficial ownership

AML in Brazil for asset managers is regulated by COAF and requires strict KYC, CDD and EDD procedures. We design client risk scoring, beneficial ownership checks and sanctions control and screening. Requirements for disclosure of beneficial owners (beneficial ownership) have tightened, and banks will not open accounts without a clear ownership structure and source of funds.

The COREDO team implements compliance procedures taking into account investor profiles: PEP, complex trusts, offshore holdings. For high-risk clients we initiate EDD and set triggers for continuous real-time transaction monitoring, which helps meet AML/CFT standards and the internal policies of custodians.

FATCA/CRS and cross-border compliance

FATCA and CRS compliance when dealing with Brazilian assets is not only the concern of administrators but also of the manager. We organize the collection of self-certifications, status updates and the proper transmission of data to administering institutions. For cross-border transactions it is important to take into account IOF and local currency rules (câmbio) so that the payment structure is lawful and predictable in timing.

Compliance in asset management in Brazil includes practices for managing conflicts of interest, personal employee trades, gifts and entertainment, as well as wall-crossing procedures in M&A deals. COREDO’s practice confirms that formalizing these rules simplifies communication with the CVM and reduces the audit burden.

Taxation of investments in Brazil

Illustration for the section «Taxation of investments in Brazil» in the article «Asset management in Brazil for foreign managers»

Tax issues in the field of investments in Brazil have a complex structure and critically affect the final returns. Below we will examine the key tax obligations: IRPJ, CSLL, IOF – and the mechanisms for repatriation of funds.

Repatriation: Corporate Income Tax, Social Contribution on Net Profit, Tax on Financial Transactions

Taxation of investments in Brazil is built around IRPJ and CSLL for companies, as well as special regimes for funds. We model conditions and taxes for repatriation of dividends and sale of assets, taking into account DTAs and withholding taxes. IOF, as a tax on financial transactions, affects short-term loans, currency conversion and investment instruments: this is important to consider in cash flows.

How to minimize corporate income tax (IRPJ) and CSLL for an investment fund: it is a matter of structure. A properly chosen type of fund and the allocation of income across group levels, taking into account transfer pricing, allow legally reducing the burden. COREDO prepares transfer pricing methodology and documentation on functions and risks to defend the position before the Receita Federal.

CFC and transfer pricing

We check CFC rules and their impact on the structure of foreign managers in every project, especially when investors or funds are from Europe or Asia. For interest, royalties and management fee we test arm’s length and the applicability of safe harbors. We align the profits of controlled companies and fund structures with the requirements of the investor’s country to eliminate double taxation and ensure substance.

We assess the impact of double tax treaties on fund income at both the recipient and source levels, synchronizing Brazilian withholdings and foreign credits/exemptions. The COREDO team uses tax matrices that are updated as rules change so clients make decisions based on current data.

Accounts and reporting in the middle/back office

Company operations rely on properly organized accounts, transparent reporting and coordinated middle/back office work; these elements are what ensure asset security and compliance with regulatory requirements. In the following sections we will examine practical nuances of working with bank accounts and custodians, as well as related accounting and control procedures.

Bank accounts and custodian

Bank accounts and custodian services in Brazil are a separate workflow. We prepare a package of documents with an apostille, prepare questionnaires on sources of funds, beneficial ownership and AML/CFT policies. Which banking and custodial services to choose for foreign managers depends on the strategy: public equities, private equity, debt structures or real estate.

How to organize due diligence of local assets and counterparties is another critical process. COREDO builds checklists for legal, tax and operational due diligence, including verification of licenses, litigation risks and ESG factors. This becomes the basis for the investment memorandum and subsequent monitoring.

Registers and reporting

Registers and reporting include CNPJ, RDE-IED, tax returns and mandatory notifications to Receita Federal and CVM. We implement operational calendars with deadlines and responsible persons so that the manager’s team meets timelines. Filing reports through electronic portals reduces the paper trail but requires care in completion and archiving.

IFRS and Brazilian standard accounting affect the fund’s and SPV’s reporting. In COREDO projects we align accounting policy between the administrator, the external auditor and the manager to avoid discrepancies in NAV valuation and DCF/comparable methodologies (comparables). This is important for correct performance reporting, carried interest and capital calls.

Currency and Risk Management

Effective currency management and timely risk assessment: the basic conditions of a company’s financial stability. In the following subsections we will examine the key market, political and regulatory risks and the tools to minimize them.

Market/Political/Regulatory Risks

risk management of a political and regulatory nature in Brazil is part of the strategic mandate. We analyze changes in CVM, ANBIMA and Banco Central regulations, and prepare roadmaps in case of tightening/loosening. Judicial risks and labor law are taken into account in models of operating costs and reserves.

We begin the analysis of the investment attractiveness of Brazilian assets with fundamental industry metrics, then supplement it with scenario analysis. For real estate and infrastructure we assess covenants, payment indexation to IPCA, tariff policy and the risk of permitting documentation. This provides a clear understanding of ROI and payback periods.

Currency Risk and Inflation

Currency risk management and hedging for investments in the Brazilian real are built in a cascade: a natural hedge at the revenue and cost level, derivatives (forwards, swaps, options) and open position limits. We check the cost of hedging and the impact on returns after fees and margin. Indexation and inflation indicators (IPCA, IGP-M) are included in stress models to assess the sensitivity of cash flows.

Scenario analysis and stress tests for a portfolio of Brazilian assets are conducted taking into account market liquidity, EM-paper spreads and BRL shocks. VaR methodologies and scenario shocks are integrated into the investment committee, and risk limits are tied to the fund’s Redeem Terms. This keeps the risk/return ratio within acceptable limits.

COREDO Case Studies

In COREDO’s practical materials we analyze real projects in detail and demonstrate how our solutions perform within industrial infrastructure. The first case is dedicated to the implementation of an FIP for an industrial cluster: from problem statement and architecture to measurable results and practical recommendations.

FIP for an industrial cluster

К нам обратился иностранный управляющий с идеей платформы roll-up в индустриальном сегменте. Решение, разработанное в COREDO, включало холдинг в Люксембурге, SPV в Бразилии (Ltda.), регистрацию управляющего в CVM и создание FIP. Мы заключили SHA с локальными соинвесторами, согласовали custodian и clearing через B3, внедрили NAV-процедуры и комплаенс-матрицу ANBIMA.

Результат: фонд прошел регистрацию, администрирование наладилось за 60 дней, а первые капиталовызовы закрылись в срок. Репатриация прибыли из Бразилии спланирована через DTA, а валютные риски хеджируются свопами с квартальной переоценкой.

Receivables Investment Fund

Команда COREDO структурировала FIDC под финансирование торговых требований ритейла. Мы отобрали сервиcера, настроили KYC/EDD для поставщиков требований, внедрили transaction monitoring в реальном времени и процедуры COAF. Transfer agency и реестр инвесторов синхронизированы с администратором, а disclosure в CVM автоматизирован.

На налоговой стороне мы просчитали transfer pricing для комиссий сервиса и установили arm’s length. В итоге доходность инвесторов стабилизировалась, а риск-факторы контролируются через ковенанты и стресс-тесты портфеля.

FII and SPV infrastructure strategy

Для инвестиций в логистические объекты мы предложили FII в связке с локальными SPV (Ltda.) и долгосрочными договорами аренды, индексированными IPCA. Практика COREDO подтвердила, что такой подход улучшает банковское финансирование и прозрачность для институциональных LP. Мы предусмотрели escrow на этапе строительства, страхование политических рисков и четкий порядок capital calls.

Репатриация дивидендов идет по DTA-правилам, а валютное хеджирование привязано к денежным потокам из аренды. Учёт по МСФО согласован с бразильским стандартом для консолидации на уровне глобального управляющего.

Roadmap for entering Brazil

  • Diagnosis of investors’ objective and mandate: risk profile, liquidity, timeframe.
  • Choice of structure: onshore vs offshore, holding, SPV, DTA and CFC assessment.
  • Legal form: Ltda. or S.A., preparation of SHA, SPA, escrow.
  • Registration in Brazil: CNPJ, CPF for directors, RDE-IED at Banco Central.
  • Bank accounts and custodians: supplier due diligence, SLA, integration with B3.
  • Regulatory access: manager registration with the CVM or sub-advisory model; ANBIMA standards.
  • Fund creation: choice of type (FIP, FIDC, FII, FIA), administrator, auditor, transfer agent.
  • Compliance/AML: KYC, CDD/EDD, COAF, sanctions screening, real-time monitoring.
  • Tax model: IRPJ, CSLL, IOF, transfer pricing, repatriation plan, DTA.
  • Operations: NAV procedures, reporting to the CVM/Receita Federal, portal filings.
  • Risks: BRL hedging policy, VaR, stress tests, governance.
  • Launch and scaling: KPI, operational

Manager’s KPIs and operating model

Operating costs and the business model for asset managers in Brazil depend on strategy and the number of providers. We track KPIs: time to close capital calls, NAV accuracy, KYC/onboarding cycle time, SLA for corporate actions and hedge cost as a share of AUM. Performance metrics and KPIs for a fund operating in Brazil include net IRR, DPI, TVPI, tracking error and compliance with risk limits.
The calculation and structure of management fee, performance fee and carried interest must take into account LP expectations and market practice. The COREDO team helps balance compensation and incentives, provide for clawback and high-water mark. This increases the predictability of the manager’s cash flows and investor confidence.

Scaling in Latin America

How to scale asset portfolio management across Latin American regions is a matter of processes. We centralize the middle office, standardize compliance and reporting, while local teams are responsible for sourcing and due diligence. Joint ventures (JVs) with Brazilian partners support deal flow, and corporate governance principles and shareholder agreements establish control and the rights of the majority shareholder.
ESG criteria and sustainable investing in Brazil strengthen negotiating positions when attracting institutional LPs. We integrate ESG policy into DD questionnaires, KPIs and investment committees so the strategy remains competitive at the level of global allocations.

How COREDO helps

I see COREDO’s value in that we combine strategy and operational execution. The COREDO team designs holding structures (onshore and offshore), calculates taxes, prepares documentation for CVM and Banco Central, and supports account openings and custodian selection. We take on AML consulting: from KYC/CDD/EDD and COAF procedures to transaction monitoring systems and sanctions screening.
The solution developed at COREDO covers accounting under IFRS and Brazilian standards, coordination with external auditors, fund administration and the CVM/Receita Federal reporting calendar. We help build transfer pricing and tax planning, organize asset protection and protection against creditor claims, analyze PE risk, and also conduct operational due diligence of service providers. This set of competencies speeds up the launch and makes management predictable.

Conclusions

Brazil, a market where scale meets regulatory depth. Here it is important to combine strategy and execution discipline: from choosing between Ltda. and S.A. and setting up a JV to registering the manager with the CVM, creating a fund and organizing custody and clearing through B3. Taxation of investments in Brazil, compliance when managing assets in Brazil and AML compliance in Brazil for asset managers determine the speed of launch, the possibility of repatriation and the ultimate returns.

COREDO’s experience shows: a well‑thought‑out structure, correct registration of a company in Brazil for a foreign manager, robust KYC/EDD and transparent reporting turn a complex market into a manageable operation. If your goal is sustainable access to Brazilian capital, using FIP, FIDC, FII where rational, and disciplined risk management for currency and IPCA inflation: this is a working formula. The COREDO team is ready to go the whole way with you – from idea and structuring to licensing, fund launch and long‑term support.

Since 2016 I have been managing COREDO and personally overseeing transactions in which a holding company in the Netherlands becomes the central element of M&A, financing and cross-border asset ownership. During this time the COREDO team has implemented dozens of projects in the EU, the United Kingdom, Singapore and Dubai, as well as in the markets of Asia and the CIS, and I can clearly see why a Dutch holding remains the number one tool for multinational groups. Below are the concentrated experience and algorithms that help clients confidently move from concept to deal closing and subsequent integration.

Why establish a holding company in the Netherlands for M&A?

Illustration for the section «Why a holding in the Netherlands for M&A?» in the article «Why Holding Company in the Netherlands for MA»

When I’m asked why a holding in the Netherlands for M&A remains a benchmark, I give three reasons: a predictable legal environment, a well-developed treaty framework for avoiding double taxation, and a clear tax logic. The advantages of a Netherlands holding for mergers and acquisitions are further strengthened by flexible corporate forms, fast registration, and acceptable operating costs.

The tax benefits of a Dutch holding are often expressed in the participation exemption (exemption for participations), protection against economic double taxation, and the ability to receive dividends in transit and further distribute them, provided substance and anti‑abuse requirements are met. Exemption from dividend tax in the Netherlands is possible under the EU Parent‑Subsidiary Directive and double tax treaties, which makes the transit of dividends through the Netherlands an efficient and controllable tool for groups with complex geography.

Legal forms of the holding

Illustration for the section «Legal forms of the holding» in the article «Why a Holding Company in the Netherlands for M&A»

The BV holding structure in the Netherlands remains the standard for M&A thanks to limited liability, minimal requirements for share capital, and clear corporate governance rules. Registering a BV as a holding is fast, and management is easily scalable to the group’s needs, including financing, IP ownership, and centralized management of holdings.

Using a stichting in M&A transactions helps address control protection, the separation of economic and voting rights, and the development of P&I (protection & independence) mechanisms in the event of unwanted takeovers. We often structure a STAK (stichting administratiekantoor), which issues depositary receipts, simplifying option plans and long-term incentives for management.

The CV form (limited partnership) and the coöperatie are used less often but remain appropriate for investor pools and flexible profit distribution. The coöperatie was historically used to minimize withholding tax on dividends; now it is used primarily for contractual flexibility and member participation, especially in venture and infrastructure projects.

Tax regime: questions and answers

Illustration for the section «Tax regime: questions and answers» in the article «Why a Holding Company in the Netherlands for MA»

Tax consequences: the basis of the architecture of any holding structure. COREDO’s practice confirms: it is better to set all parameters at the start than to rebuild the structure later to meet the requirements of tax authorities and bank compliance.

Participation exemption in the Netherlands

The participation exemption covers dividends and capital gains from shares in subsidiaries if conditions are met. Typically required:

  • minimum participation share of at least 5%;
  • commercial motivation for ownership (motive test);
  • absence of predominantly passive assets in the subsidiary or sufficient taxation of the subsidiary’s profit (asset/subject‑to‑tax tests).
It is sufficient to satisfy tests confirming commercial substance for the participation not to be considered low‑tax portfolio investing. I often stress to clients: a formal share is half the story; the other half is demonstrable economic justification (business purpose) and appropriate substance.

Corporate income tax for holdings in the Netherlands

The basic CIT rate in the Netherlands is 25.8% (a reduced rate of around 19% applies to profits up to a set income threshold). For income covered by the participation exemption, no tax is payable. Capital gains tax on the sale of a share via the Netherlands is also not levied if the participation exemption applies, which is critical when planning an exit or reorganisation.

Withholding tax and transit of dividends

The standard withholding tax on dividend payments from the Netherlands is 15%, but double tax treaties and the Parent‑Subsidiary Directive often reduce the rate to 0–5% between related parties within the EU. Since 2024 there is also a “conditional” withholding tax on dividends to low‑tax/sanctioned jurisdictions at a rate comparable to the upper bound of CIT. The MLI (Multilateral Instrument) has strengthened anti‑abuse provisions in DTTs and introduced the PPT (principal purpose test), so routing dividends through the Netherlands is only possible with a genuine economic purpose.

BEPS, ATAD, CFC and Pillar Two

The impact of BEPS and ATAD on Dutch holdings is manifested through:

  • interest limitation at 30% of EBITDA (ATAD interest limitation);
  • anti‑hybrid rules (ATAD 2);
  • CFC rules and their impact on holding structures where there are controlled foreign companies in low‑tax jurisdictions;
  • a general anti‑abuse rule (GAAR) and the PPT from the MLI.

Pillar Two (the global minimum tax) introduces a 15% effective rate for multinational groups with revenue over EUR 750 million. We assess the impact of Pillar Two on the holding structure in advance: we build an ETR model, check IIR/UTPR exposure and, if necessary, adjust the ownership chain and local substance.

Economic substance: requirements and practices

Illustration for the section «Economic substance: requirements and practices» in the article «Why a Holding Company in the Netherlands for M&A»

Economic presence (substance) for a Dutch holding has ceased to be optional. Substance requirements for holdings in the Netherlands include local directors with real control, an office/team, a business plan, a resident bank account, local accounting and meeting minutes protocols. I use a “substance roadmap” of 10 points, where we set KPIs for functions, risks and assets, as well as analogue and digital evidence of substance for the tax authorities: employment contracts, lease agreements, billings, minutes and timesheets.

How to prove the economic justification of a holding to the tax authorities? We link the role of the BV to investment management, debt financing, centralized treasury, IP licensing or preparation for an IPO/exit. Continuity and scalability of functions are important: one meeting a year does not create substance; regular board decisions do.

AML and KYC for a holding in the Netherlands

Illustration for the section «AML and KYC for a holding in the Netherlands» in the article «Why Holding Company in the Netherlands for MA»

AML policy and a risk‑based approach are not a formality but part of the holding’s protection. KYC and opening a bank account in the Netherlands require a transparent ownership structure, proof of source of funds, sanctions screening and PEP‑screening. Banking requirements and the sanctions screening procedure are now stricter than five years ago, so we prepare a “KYC‑package” in advance: corporate documents, UBO questionnaires, flow diagrams, financial models.

UBO registration for holdings in the Netherlands is mandatory. The Netherlands UBO register: disclosure of beneficiaries is made in the KvK, while public access is limited and banks and competent authorities have direct access. CRS and FATCA obligations of a holding in the Netherlands arise if the company qualifies as a financial institution; otherwise, we check group statuses to avoid unexpected reporting and fines. Suspicious activity reporting: FIU‑Nederland: I train client teams on the principles of identifying red flags and documenting refusals/escalations.

DAC6: reporting on aggressive cross‑border schemes: relevant for advisers and taxpayers when hallmark indicators are present. COREDO’s practice confirms: a correct description of the commercial purpose, the substantive role of the BV and the absence of automatic “indicators” sharply reduces the risk of reporting.

Transfer pricing through APA/ATR

Transfer pricing policy for holding companies, the foundation of a fixed margin and a protective “perimeter” during Belastingdienst audits. We build the policy based on functions‑risks‑assets, select comparable transactions and prepare the Master File, Local File and, if necessary, the CbCR.

APA (advance pricing agreement) for transfer prices provides certainty for years ahead. Advance tax rulings (tax rulings) in the Netherlands are possible with sufficient substance and the absence of “double non‑taxation”. How to obtain a Dutch tax ruling: procedure and documents: we describe the business model, value‑creation chains, TP methodology, organizational structure, planned margin and the operating role of the BV. The solution developed at COREDO includes a preliminary “pre‑read” for Belastingdienst and staged communication that narrows the inspector’s line of questioning.

BV Registration: Chamber of Commerce and Tax and Customs Administration

The procedure for registering a BV and the timeframes usually take 3–7 business days after receiving the KYC package and draft documentation from the notary. The list of documents for BV registration includes passports of directors/UBOs, proof of addresses, the articles of association, the memorandum of association, corporate resolutions and a description of activities. Entry in the KvK trade register for the holding takes place on the day of signing at the notary, and a KvK number and VAT number are assigned (by a separate procedure).

Interaction with the Belastingdienst and tax audits requires careful communication: we register for CIT, for VAT if necessary, file nil returns before the start of operations, notify on transfer pricing and prepare a dividend policy. Opening a bank account for the holding in the Netherlands usually takes 2–6 weeks and depends on the UBO’s geography and the group structure.

The cost of maintaining a holding in the Netherlands and OPEX ranges from €12,000 to €50,000 per year with a local director, office, accounting, audit and corporate secretarial support. Corporate secretarial support and reporting cover minutes of meetings, annual reporting, UBO updates and interaction with the KvK and Belastingdienst.

Governance and protection of interests

Corporate governance requirements in a Dutch BV impose duties on the BV’s directors to act in the interests of the company and the group, and set out responsibility for proper accounting and compliance with tax and sanctions rules. The role of a stichting (foundation) in protecting assets and P&I is especially notable in public and pre‑IPO structures: a stichting may hold privileged voting rights or manage a “golden share”.

Protection against creditor claims and priority of claims is achieved through a combination of corporate and contractual mechanisms: subordination of intragroup debt, negative pledge, covenants, escrow and W&I insurance in transactions.

M&A transactions through a Dutch holding company

A holding company and the transactional structure of M&A deals in the Netherlands provide flexibility in choosing a share deal or an asset deal. The difference between a share deal and an asset deal in the Dutch context appears in the tax base, transfer of liabilities, VAT/transfer taxes and speed of integration. I usually recommend a share deal for portfolio investors and an asset deal for carve-outs with complex liabilities.

SPA – tax and corporate provisions determine the allocation of risks: limitations on liability, survival periods, tax warranties, covenants on substance and TP, closing conditions, price adjustment mechanisms. Structuring an earn-out through a Dutch holding is convenient due to flexible dividend distribution rules and the ability to link metrics to EBITDA/revenue without breaching the participation exemption. Escrow mechanisms in deals involving a holding are often combined with W&I insurance for optimal risk allocation.

Integration after M&A using a holding in the Netherlands requires well-honed processes: consolidation, updating the transfer pricing policy, realigning intercompany agreements, unifying dividend policy and restructuring treasury. Integration of tax processes after M&A includes standardizing VAT accounting, DAC6 procedures, KPIs for the CCO (compliance officer) and setting up an audit trail.

Due Diligence when purchasing a holding in the Netherlands covers:

  • tax due diligence – checklist for buyers: CIT, VAT, WHT, TP files, APA/ATR status, DAC6, CFC, ATAD, Pillar Two exposure;
  • legal protection mechanisms for buyers and sellers: reps & warranties, indemnities, escrow, locked‑box vs completion accounts;
  • compliance and sanctions due diligence: AML policies, PEP procedures, FIU reporting.

Financing/IP/venture/estate planning

Raising finance through a Dutch holding is convenient thanks to loan agreements governed by English law, clear mechanisms for pledging shares/assets and a predictable TP approach. We set up intercompany loans on arm’s‑length terms, monitor interest covenants and check the 30% EBITDA limit for interest.

Structuring IP and royalties through a holding requires careful assessment of anti‑hybrid/BEPS and the presence of a real IP management function: strategy, Licensing, marketing, R&D contracts.

International licensing of IP and the tax consequences affect VAT, WHT on royalties (including “deemed” WHT on payments to low‑tax jurisdictions), as well as the TP margin for IP management.

Venture investments and a holding structure in the Netherlands rely on the issuance of convertible loans, preferred shares and option programmes through STAK. We build estate planning and inheritance through a Dutch holding using stichting/coöperatie and trust solutions outside the Netherlands to separate control, ownership and dividend flows, taking into account DTTs and local inheritance rules of beneficiaries.

Contractual network: migration and exit

Tax treaties for the avoidance of double taxation – we check key provisions with respect to the beneficial owner, PPT, WHT limits and special clauses for holdings. Withholding tax rates and minimisation methods rely on DTT, the Parent‑Subsidiary Directive, confirmation of residence and substance.

Exit tax on the transfer of a company’s residence may arise when management is migrated outside the Netherlands; we avoid “silent” relocations, fix the centre of decision‑making in the Netherlands and record minutes of meetings. The tax consequences of selling a subsidiary through a holding are managed via the participation exemption, and for investors: through special SPA provisions, earn‑out mechanisms and payment deferrals.
The impact of Brexit on transactional routes through the Netherlands is tangible in VAT chains, rules of origin and WHT on certain flows. We pre‑calculate supply/payment routes and update contractual provisions on Incoterms and tax representations.

ESG Governance and Reporting

Disclosure and transparency rules for investors require a clear dividend policy and intercompany payments within the holding, as well as best practices for maintaining tax documentation and an audit trail. I formalize internal compliance controls and the role of the CCO (compliance officer) through a risk matrix: AML, sanctions, tax and TP‑control, ESG‑metrics and reports to the board of directors.

ROI metrics for the holding structure (NPV, IRR, payback) are calculated together with clients, adding the «cost of compliance» and the benefit from reduced WHT/capital gains tax. Assessing tax efficiency and tax savings vs the cost of compliance helps make a mature decision: instead of «minimizing at any cost», sustainability and predictability over a 5–7 year horizon. Reputational and ESG risks of an international holding become a factor in access to capital, so I set KPIs for substance, reporting and sanctions procedures directly in the project’s roadmap.

COREDO case

  • Transit of dividends through the Netherlands and an Asian exit. The COREDO team structured a BV holding for a group exiting investments in Southeast Asia. The participation exemption conditions covered the share sale, the DTT reduced the withholding tax on dividends to 5%, and the presence of substance in Amsterdam passed the PPT review. Result: a predictable tax burden and a successful reinvestment through a European platform.
  • Use of a stichting in M&A and protection of control. In the IT assets consolidation deal we implemented a STAK to separate economic rights and voting rights. This allowed investors to receive priority on dividends, and founders to retain strategic control until KPIs are met. The solution developed at COREDO simplified the SPA and reduced the scope of warranties due to the clear structure of rights.
  • APA for the treasury function and debt financing. Our experience at COREDO has shown that pre‑agreeing margins with Belastingdienst through an APA saves years of potential disputes. We prepared a TP policy, comparable data and a substance dossier; the inspector approved the target margin, and the bank increased the credit line after receiving the APA.

Frequently asked questions from clients

  • Tax treaties and the Netherlands: changes from the MLI and local anti‑abuse rules have strengthened requirements for the beneficial owner and the business purpose. I always build an evidentiary base regarding substance and the value‑creation chain into projects.
  • How to obtain a Dutch tax ruling: procedure and documents? I prepare a business questionnaire, a functional map, a financial model, drafts of intercompany agreements and the “inspector’s questionnaire”. In the pilot we agree the scope of the request, then submit formally.
  • Timeline and cost of registering a holding in the Netherlands. Registering a BV takes up to a week, for the bank – 2–6 weeks, for tax numbers: up to 2 weeks. OPEX, from €12,000 to €50,000 per year depending on the mix of functions and the audit.
  • Tax incentives and grants in the Netherlands for group companies. For operating centres R&D incentives, innovation and sustainability subsidies may be available; the holding itself does not receive incentives, but can redistribute funding within the group.

COREDO Roadmap

  1. Diagnostics: M&A objectives, dividend/royalty routes, DTT, ATAD/BEPS/Pillar Two risks.
  2. Structuring: legal form (BV/CV/coöperatie/stichting), dividend policy, TP‑policy, AML‑risk map.
  3. Registration: notary, KvK, UBO, VAT/CIT, bank, local director and office.
  4. Predictability: APA/ATR where necessary, preparation for DAC6 and CFC analysis.
  5. Documentation: corporate governance, minutes, substance‑dossier, audit trail.
  6. Transaction: SPA package, escrow, W&I, earn‑out, integration and update of TP/VAT.
  7. Monitoring: interaction with Belastingdienst, CCO KPIs, regular health‑check of the structure.

Legal support and resilience

Legal support for an international holding in the Netherlands includes regular updates to the articles of association, option plans, intercompany agreements, bank covenants and SPA restrictions. The COREDO team assists with filing changes in the KvK trade register for holdings, prepares notifications to the Belastingdienst and monitors compliance with ATAD, DAC6 and local AML rules.

We record the dividend policy and intercompany payments in the holding by separate resolutions, tie them to the TP model and the group’s cash-flow needs. Best practices for maintaining tax documentation and the audit trail are timely minutes, descriptions of business purposes and an archive of relevant correspondence/memoranda.

Conclusions

A holding in the Netherlands is not an “off-the-shelf” solution, but a manageable architecture for M&A, financing and asset protection. I build such structures on the principles of transparency, substance and long-term predictability, because only in this way do they withstand scrutiny over time, from tax authorities and banks. The experience of using the Netherlands in cross-border M&A, and COREDO cases, shows: a properly designed BV with a clear dividend policy, TP rules and AML/KYC compliance delivers meaningful gains in tax efficiency, deal speed and access to capital.
If structuring transactions through a Dutch holding, minimizing dividend withholding and protection against BEPS/ATAD/Pillar Two risks are important to you, the COREDO team will propose a roadmap and implement it from BV registration to SPA closing and integration. I am responsible for strategy and quality, and COREDO’s practice confirms: a well-designed Dutch holding functions as a reliable “framework” for international growth and a safe investor exit.

Since 2016 I have been building COREDO as a platform where legal precision meets technological practice. During that time the COREDO team has implemented dozens of projects in the EU, the United Kingdom, Singapore, Dubai, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus and Estonia: from company formation and obtaining financial licenses to AML consulting and implementing smart contracts into a client’s operating model. In this article I present a systematic view: when and how smart contracts operate as a legally meaningful infrastructure, how to reduce risks and achieve measurable ROI.

Our experience at COREDO has shown that “smart contracts for business” is not about fashion, but about managed automation of obligations in accordance with contract law and regulatory frameworks. I will examine legal statuses in key jurisdictions, issues of recognition in courts, the connection with AML/KYC and data protection, and provide guidance on designing “self-executing contracts” and the economics of implementation (TCO, CAPEX, OPEX and ROI metrics).

Smart contracts: legal reality

Illustration for the section «Smart contracts: legal reality» in the article «Smart contracts in the legal field – a legal agreement»

Smart contracts are code that automatically executes pre-defined terms of a transaction on a distributed ledger (DLT). In business practice I prefer the formulation “smart contract as a legal agreement,” because the legal force of smart contracts arises not from the code but from the parties’ mutual will and compliance with the applicable law, with the code serving as the execution infrastructure.
The core of the debate “code as law vs code and law” is that lex cryptographica, cryptographic law, does not repeal contract law but coexists with it. Blockchain and distributed ledgers are important in law as mechanisms for recording facts and ensuring performance, but the legal framework is set by rules: offer, acceptance, consideration, legal capacity and the permissibility of terms.
COREDO’s practice confirms: DLT and the legal force of records strengthen the evidentiary basis if the transaction architecture is subject to the chosen law and properly documented off-chain.

Smart contract vs traditional contract

A traditional contract relies on subsequent performance and, in dispute, on judicial enforcement. A smart contract, as an alternative mechanism for performance of obligations, is built into the mechanism: performance occurs automatically, and penalties can be embedded in the code logic (withholding, escrow, fines). At the same time legal risks of smart contracts include faulty code, incorrect oracle data and non-compliance with mandatory rules.
The solution developed at COREDO is to combine on-chain and off-chain legal mechanisms, where the code executes only those terms that are suitable for automation, and the rest remain in the contractual documentation.

International framework: EU, Asia, CIS

Illustration for the section 'International framework: EU, Asia, CIS' in the article 'Smart contracts in the legal field – a legal agreement'

The international framework covers the EU, Asia and the CIS countries, where approaches to regulating smart contracts differ significantly in terms of recognition, evidentiary value and liability. Below we will examine the key legal features and practical implications for each region, starting with the legal status of smart contracts in the EU.

Legal status of smart contracts in the EU

In the EU we rely on eIDAS and the electronic signature: a qualified electronic signature (QES) is equated with a handwritten signature. If parties need unconditional recognition of a signature for an off‑chain document, we recommend a QES — and anchoring the document’s hash on a blockchain to record transactions as evidence. MiCA and EU digital asset regulation shape the framework for tokens and service providers, affecting KYC/AML and disclosures.
DLT and the legal effect of records in the EU are supported by national acts (for example, pilot regimes for DLT market infrastructures). To recognize a smart contract as part of a transaction, we include in the master agreement provisions on the applicable law, arbitration and on‑chain addresses as identifiers of the parties. This reduces disputes about the ‘formality threshold’ and facilitates the admissibility of electronic evidence in court.

Legal status of smart contracts in Asia

Singapore, Hong Kong and the UAE (Dubai) promote a technology-neutral approach. In Singapore, MAS regulatory sandboxes accelerate testing of DLT solutions while complying with AML. In the DIFC/ADGM in the UAE, flexible regimes for digital assets operate, and courts recognize a wide range of electronic evidence.
In these jurisdictions, smart contracts and electronic signatures rely on general principles of contract law: the intention to be bound, certainty of terms, and the parties’ capacity to enter into transactions.

International regulation: UNCITRAL

UNCITRAL and model laws on digital contracts set the basis for equal legal force of electronic communications and traditional documents. In cross‑border projects I insist on conflict-of-law clauses and choice of applicable law, as well as a description of the procedure for international enforcement of decisions and recognition of blockchain operations.
This approach ensures predictability when working in supply chains and trade finance.

Legal force and recognition in court

Illustration for the section «Legal force and recognition in court» in the article «Smart contracts in the legal field – legal contract»

Understanding the legal force of electronic documents is important for minimizing risks and ensuring their applicability in legal practice. Below we will examine mechanisms of court recognition, enforcement of decisions, features of electronic evidence, and rules for secure storage that determine when digital data become fully admissible evidence.

Recognition of electronic evidence

Issues of recognition and enforcement of smart contracts in courts boil down to three things: validity of the agreement, coherence of code and text, and admissibility of evidence. To ensure “how to ensure proof of smart contract execution in court,” the COREDO team builds an evidence preservation framework and a data storage chain: notarized timestamps, call logging, version hashing, and storage of execution logs.
This increases the admissibility of electronic evidence in court and reduces the risk of losing digital traces.

On-chain and off-chain: mechanisms and arbitration

On-chain and off-chain legal mechanisms complement each other: the code executes payments, escrow, and time-locks, while the off-chain agreement covers force majeure in automated contracts, liability, and fault tolerance.
Smart contracts and arbitration: including arbitration clauses is critical — part of the dispute logic can be delegated to on-chain arbitration and dispute-resolution logic (for example, via multisig arbitrators), but the final decision is often better entrusted to institutional arbitration (LCIA, SIAC) to preserve the possibility of an enforceable award.

AML/KYC: data protection

Illustration for the section «AML/KYC: data protection» in the article «Smart contracts in the legal field – legal agreement»

AML/KYC processes, a key tool in identifying and managing risks, require strict adherence to international standards and compliance procedures. Reliable data protection ensures the traceability of operations and reduces the likelihood of leaks, which will form the basis for the discussion of risks, recommendations of FATF and traceability issues.

AML/KYC risks and FATF recommendations

Smart contracts and AML/KYC must be designed together with the provider’s policies. FATF recommendations on virtual assets and AML require counterparty identification and transaction monitoring. We integrate KYC solutions for smart contracts through identification providers and address whitelists.
We also use transaction traceability and forensic blockchain analysis to identify links to sanctioned entities or risk pools.
Regulation of digital assets and its impact on smart contracts is manifested in the licensing of VASP/PSP and the travel rule. COREDO’s practice confirms: early alignment of AML processes with contract logic saves months in licensing in the EU, the UK and Singapore.

GDPR data protection

Smart contracts and GDPR require caution with hard-to-delete data on the ledger. We apply privacy-by-design and compliance-by-design: personal data is stored off-chain with access control, and only pseudonymized hashes are written on-chain.
personal data protection in blockchain systems is achieved through access tokens, encryption and data minimization policies. Smart contracts and personal data protection are not a ban, but an engineering discipline.

Asset licensing and tokenization

Illustration for the section «Asset licensing and tokenization» in the article «Smart contracts in the legal field – legal contract»

Licensing in asset tokenization is a key factor determining the legality and commercial sustainability of projects in the digital rights market. In the following section we will examine in detail which licenses are required and how the MiCA framework shapes requirements for the issuance and circulation of tokens.

MiCA licenses

Financial licenses (crypto, banking, forex, payment services) determine how and which smart contracts can be used for the issuance, exchange and custody of tokens. MiCA and cryptocurrency regulation and their impact on smart contracts introduce requirements for the whitepaper, asset management and stablecoin reserves.
The COREDO team guides clients through a pre-licensing audit so that code and business processes comply with regulatory expectations.

Tokenization standards

Smart contracts and asset tokenization use standards ERC-20, ERC-721 and legal characteristics of tokens: transferability, property rights, corporate and consumer restrictions. Legal support for asset tokenization includes analysis of token classification (payment, utility, security), marketing regimes and cross-border offerings.

DAO Corporate Governance

Smart contracts and corporate governance enhance transparency: from the treasury to the enforcement of limits. DAO as a form of corporate structure and the legal challenges boil down to personal liability, taxes and recognition of legal personality.
In some jurisdictions legal models for DAOs and automated governance are recognized, but more often we create a “governing shell” (LLC/基金/Foundation) and register on-chain governance rules as internal regulations.
Multisignature (multisig) and distributed accountability allow managing the risks of unilateral control. For large treasuries we implement the fulfillment of obligations through multisig and escrow, and standardize roles and approval procedures.

Legally compliant smart contracts

Designing requires attention to detail: smart contracts must be legally compliant and drafted so that their execution conforms to legal norms. In the following sections we will review practical steps for drafting and bringing them in line with contract law requirements to minimize the risk of disputes and ensure the enforceability of the terms.

Formalize the contract under contract law

How to legally formalize a smart contract — rely on a master agreement where:

  • the parties are defined (legal entities and their on-chain addresses);
  • the smart contract is described as a legal agreement, its functions and limitations;
  • the role of standard clauses in smart contracts is established: governing law, forum, arbitration, notices, force majeure;
  • penalties and sanctions for breach of smart contracts and off-ramp procedures are provided;
  • escrow via smart contracts and conditional transfers, time-lock and conditions for deferred performance are described.
To address “how to ensure a smart contract complies with contract law”, we agree the offer/acceptance and consideration in an off-chain document, and make the code an annex with the hash and address.
Smart contracts in international trade require Incoterms clauses, payment currency, taxes and prohibitions on sanctioned supplies.
A template of a legal smart contract for commercial transactions in our practice is a package:
– Master Agreement with governing law and arbitration;
– Technical specification (description of the state machine, events, roles);
– Oracle and data source policy;
– Emergency shutdown and migration plan (upgrade path);
– Appendix with the hash of the source code and the deployment address.

Electronic signature: eIDAS and QES

Smart contracts and electronic signatures must interlock so as to express the parties’ intent. In the EU we anchor the signature of the contract text with a qualified electronic signature (QES), and in the smart contract itself we refer to identifiers of the signed document.
This reduces the risk of disputes about the validity of arbitrary addresses and strengthens the evidentiary value.

The role and liability of oracles

The role of oracles in legally significant smart contracts is critical because they translate the external world into an on-chain state. Oracle reliability and legal liability require: source audits, provider SLAs and insurance coverage.
Legal requirements for oracles and data providers include compliance with licensing (where applicable), transparency of methodologies and incident response procedures.

Reliability and security of technologies

The reliability of the technological platform and ensuring its security are not abstract tasks but mandatory conditions for the stable operation of systems and the preservation of users’ trust. This is achieved through formal verification, independent audits, and a clear allocation of responsibility among the participants in the process.

Formal verification and audit

Formal verification (formal verification) of smart contracts and formal verification methods reduce the likelihood of logical vulnerabilities. security audit of smart contracts and legal liability should be stipulated in the contract: scope of the audit, exceptions, responsibility of the developer and the client.
Secure development practices (secure coding) and code audit and compliance include static and dynamic analysis, threat modeling, and mandatory testing of emergency scenarios.
Smart contract vulnerabilities and legal consequences concern restitution, reputation, and possible regulatory liability.
The COREDO team recommends reserve funds and cyber risk insurance policies for critical protocols.

Upgradeability, versions and SLA

Upgradeable contracts and the legal consequences require special provisions: who and how initiates an upgrade, how the parties’ rights are preserved, which contract upgrade mechanisms (upgradeability patterns) are applied (proxy, beacons), and how the user is notified.
Version control and change management in smart contracts are recorded via release hashes and an approvals log.
SLA for decentralized applications formalizes availability, RPO/RTO, and the incident management procedure. Security policies and access management, as well as monitoring tools and incident response in DLT (on-chain monitoring, anomaly alerts, key management), are part of the mandatory operational procedures.

Integration and operational model

Integration of key systems: ERP/CRM and CLM is a prerequisite for building a transparent and manageable operational model where data and processes are aligned across departments. In the following points we will examine which standards and architectural solutions provide such synchronization and how this is reflected in daily operations.

ERP/CRM and CLM standards

How to integrate smart contracts with ERP and CLM — via data buses and events (webhooks) with guaranteed delivery and status mapping.

Integration with ERP/CRM and CLM automation allow linking contract law and the automated execution of terms to the deal lifecycle.
Contract lifecycle management (CLM) for smart contracts is complemented by “smart metadata”: versions, addresses, signing rights, deadlines. Smart contracts and document management standards rely on smart-contract interoperability standards (EIP/ERC), and in the corporate environment on APIs corresponding to ISO 20022/EDI where payments and logistics are involved.
This reduces friction between the legal and technical domains.

Operational limits and scalability

The scalability of blockchain solutions and business risks depend on throughput, TPS and the network’s operational constraints. Gas fees and their impact on the commercial model should be defined in the economics of the deal: who pays the fee, at what level of network load execution is permitted, and how transaction queues operate.
The COREDO team models worst-case scenarios to prevent execution from “sticking” due to infrastructure faults.

Economics of implementation

The economic aspects of implementation determine how viable and cost-effective the project will be in the long term. In this section we will examine key metrics, ROI and TCO, and discuss risk insurance mechanisms that help protect investments and reduce uncertainty.

ROI and TCO in risk insurance

The benefits and ROI from implementing smart contracts in a company appear in reduced operational errors, accelerated DSO/working capital turnover, and lower dispute costs. ROI metrics for smart contracts: cycle time from order to payment, frequency of claims, share of automated payments, savings on manual checks.
TCO and the economic model for implementing smart contracts account for TCO, CAPEX and OPEX when deploying DLT: development, audit, licensing, node hosting, monitoring, legal support, insurance. The risk assessment model and cyber risk insurance are included in the financial model taking business criticality into account.
Smart contracts and tax implications for companies require early involvement of tax advisors: classification of income, VAT/GST on tokenized services, taxation of token issuance and burning, transfer pricing in cross-jurisdictional flows.

COREDO case studies and best practices

In the supply chain, one European manufacturer implemented smart contracts in international trade for letters of credit with conditional transfer. We drafted arbitration provisions, implemented plausibility oracles for delivery statuses and multisig escrow for the supplier and the bank, which reduced collection time by 37%.
Practical cases: disputes, arbitration, enforcement, have shown that on-chain recording and pre-agreed SLAs speed up dispute resolution.
In an asset tokenization project in Estonia, the COREDO team developed an oracle policy, included upgradeability with upgrade locks during a dispute, and conducted a code audit and compliance according to the requirements of the virtual asset service provider license.
In Singapore we guided a client through the MAS regulatory sandbox, combining KYC solutions for smart contracts with forensic blockchain analysis for counterparty risk monitoring.
In corporate governance (Dubai) we designed a treasury DAO model for a legal wrapper in ADGM: multisig, distributed responsibility, version control and change management, as well as security policies and access management.
COREDO’s practice confirms: best practices for implementing smart contracts in corporations: it’s always cross-functional teams: lawyers, developers, risk management and finance at the same table.

Preparing a company for smart contracts

The first stage is process diagnostics: where automation of performance delivers the greatest benefit without violating the law. Next, standardization of model clauses for automated contracts: arbitration, force majeure, upgrades, sanctions, taxes.
Documenting requirements and SLA for smart contracts helps teams align and protects the budget.
I recommend a phased implementation plan:

  • legal map: applicable law, licenses, AML/KYC, GDPR;
  • architecture: on-chain/off-chain separation, oracles, evidence storage;
  • security: secure coding, audit, formal verification on critical components;
  • operations: monitoring, incidents, SLA, reserves and insurance;
  • integration: ERP/CRM, CLM, document management standards and interoperability.

Regulatory and judicial practice

Case law on matters involving smart contracts in the EU and Asia shows a growing willingness of courts to recognize electronic evidence and smart logic as part of a transaction. International guidelines on digital contracts from UNCITRAL support the equal legal force of electronic communications, which is important for cross-border enforcement.
On-chain arbitration is useful as an operational filter for disputes, but for international enforcement of decisions we provide for traditional arbitration with a clear exequatur procedure. With a sound architecture — recording transactions as evidence, evidence preservation, and a chain of custody for data — courts accept on-chain records as part of the evidentiary base.

COREDO turns technology into results

Smart contracts are not an end in themselves or a risky experiment. They are a way to make contract law and the automation of contract execution part of your processes with manageable risks and measurable economics.
The COREDO team has implemented integrations in the EU, the UK, Singapore, Dubai, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Cyprus and Estonia, and our experience at COREDO has shown: sustainable results are achieved where legal engineering, security and licensing go hand in hand.
If it’s important to reduce TCO, increase ROI and gain predictability in international trade, tokenization or payments, use the approach: law first, architecture up front, security continuously.
My colleagues and I at COREDO are ready to handle legal entity registration, obtaining the required financial licenses, AML consulting, building on-chain/off-chain mechanics and supporting implementation through to operational resilience.
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