LAWFLASH
IMPLEMENTATION OF NEW UK PSC
REGIME
February 26, 2016
AUTHORS AND CONTACTS
Iain Wright, Ann-Marie Davies
UK companies will be obliged to take steps to identify and maintain a public register of persons with
signiï¬cant control, and such persons must supply such companies with information for inclusion on the
register or face criminal penalties and possibly frozen shareholder rights.
On 25 January, the ï¬nal version of the Register of People with Signiï¬cant Control Regulations 2016 (the
PSC Regulations) was laid before the UK Parliament for approval. Similarly, the Department for Business,
Innovation and Skills (DBIS) has now published its ï¬nal guidance on the meaning of “signiï¬cant influence
and control” (the ï¬nal amendments were released on 22 February). The PSC Regulations implement and
provide further details about the new regime, which was introduced by the Small Business, Enterprise and
Employment Act 2015 (SBEEA).
BACKGROUND
The SBEEA introduced a new regime under which UK companies, limited liability partnerships (LLPs), and
other UK corporate entities are obliged to maintain a register of people with signiï¬cant control over the
respective entity (the PSC Register). The purpose of this regime is to increase transparency over the identity
of the ultimate beneï¬cial owners of such UK entities.
The SBEEA provided that, before the new regime was
introduced, further details on certain aspects of the new regime would be set out in regulations, and also
provided for the government to issue guidance on the interpretation and implementation of certain aspects
of the new regime.
The PSC Regulations set out such details in relation to the application of the new regime to companies.
Similar provisions relating to the application of the new regime to LLPs are set out in the Limited Liability
Partnerships (Register of People with Signiï¬cant Control) Regulations 2016 (the LLP Regulations). The new
regime takes effect on 6 April 2016.
WHICH ENTITIES MUST MAINTAIN A PSC REGISTER?
The new regime will apply to all UK-incorporated companies limited by shares or guarantee, UK LLPs, and
societas Europaea (SEs). However, a company will be exempt if it is either (a) already subject to the
reporting requirements of Chapter 5 of the Disclosure and Transparency Rules (which apply to all listed and
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AIM-quoted companies incorporated in the UK) (DTR5) or (b) is listed on a regulated market in another
European Economic Area state or on certain other markets (in Israel, Japan, Switzerland, and the United
States) speciï¬ed in Schedule 1 to the PSC Regulations. Overseas entities that operate in the UK are not
subject to the regime.
This LawFlash only considers the regime as it applies to companies. However, the rules that apply to LLPs
and SEs are very similar.
WHO IS A “PERSON WITH SIGNIFICANT CONTROL”?
A “person with signiï¬cant control” (PSC) is an individual who meets one of the following criteria:
Has direct or indirect ownership of more than 25% of a company’s shares
Has direct or indirect control of more than 25% of a company’s voting rights
Has the direct or indirect right to appoint or remove more than 50% of directors
Exercises (or has the right to exercise) signiï¬cant influence or control over a company
Exercises (or has the right to exercise) signiï¬cant influence or control over a trust or ï¬rm that meets one
of the above conditions
The DBIS guidance published this month gives further guidance on what is meant by “signiï¬cant influence
and control”. Among other things, it sets out certain relationships, such as limited partnership interests or
commercial lenders, which are not normally considered to constitute signiï¬cant influence or control for
these purposes.
Similarly, the guidance sets out circumstances, such as the right to control key decisions
relating to a business (e.g., approval of the business plan, or veto rights over the appointment of a majority
of the directors), which may indicate signiï¬cant influence or control.
In addition, some entities (such as governments, local authorities, etc.), will be capable of being PSCs.
“Relevant legal entities” will also need to be disclosed on the PSC Register; these are essentially entities
that would be PSCs if they were individuals and are subject to their own disclosure regime, for example
under DTR5.
WHAT ARE COMPANIES COVERED BY THE REGIME REQUIRED TO DO?
UK companies must do the following from 6 April 2016:
Maintain a PSC Register.
Take reasonable steps to identify people they know or suspect have signiï¬cant control. The DBIS
guidance includes factors to consider for the purposes of meeting the test of taking "reasonable steps"
for these purposes.
Serve statutory notices on any suspected PSC or relevant legal entity requiring that person to conï¬rm
whether or not he or she is a PSC or relevant legal entity and provide certain speciï¬ed information. A
company may also be obliged to serve notices on certain other persons, including persons the company
knows or suspects knows the identity of any PSC or relevant legal entity, or where it believes that a
person has ceased to be a PSC or relevant legal entity, or there has otherwise been a change of
circumstances.
In addition, from 30 June 2016, UK companies must provide the information on the PSC Register to
Companies House when they ï¬le their annual conï¬rmation statement (which will replace the annual
return) or, for new companies, on incorporation.
The information ï¬led at Companies House will be publicly
. available for free on a single searchable public register. Private companies will have the option to maintain
their PSC Register at Companies House, provided that no PSC objects.
A company’s failure to comply with these statutory obligations will constitute an offence by the company
and any company officer who is in default.
WHAT MUST A PSC DO?
PSCs (or relevant legal entities) are obliged to provide the following:
The information set out in any statutory notice received from the company.
The prescribed information even if such person has not received such a notice, if such person knows or
ought reasonably to know that he or she is a PSC (or relevant legal entity), has been for at least one
month, and his or her details are not already disclosed in the PSC Register. A similar obligation arises if
there is any subsequent change in such information.
Failing to comply with a statutory notice or to comply with the general obligation to provide information is
an offence, unless certain conditions are met. In addition, if any person fails to comply with a statutory
notice served on it by a company, the company may give that person a warning notice that it intends to
issue the person with a restrictions notice with respect to its interests in the company.
If a restrictions
notice is subsequently served, any transfer of the restricted interests will be void, no dividends may be paid
on such interests, and no rights attached to such interests may be exercised (and it is an offence for the
person to try to do any such thing).
WHAT INFORMATION WILL BE INCLUDED IN THE PSC REGISTER?
Where a PSC is an individual, the following information must be disclosed on the PSC Register: name,
service address, usual country or state of residence, nationality, date of birth, usual residential address, date
on which such person became a PSC in relation to the company, and the nature of his or her control over the
company. Companies must update this information if they know or might reasonably be expected to have
known there has been a change.
The PSC Register should also include details of any relevant legal entity. The intention is that an interested
party could then look at disclosures made by such relevant legal entity under its own disclosure regime to
identify any ultimate PSC.
The PSC Register can never be blank.
A company should disclose in the PSC Register whenever it (a) has
reason to believe that there are PSCs or relevant legal entities but it has not been able to identify them or
conï¬rm their details, (b) knows or has reasonable cause to believe that there are no PSCs or relevant legal
entities, (c) has not yet completed taking reasonable steps to determine whether there are any PSCs or
relevant legal entities; (d) has served a statutory notice that has not been complied with (or there was late
compliance), or (e) has issued or withdrawn a restrictions notice.
A company’s PSC Register must be made available for free to any person on request, or a copy provided on
request at a cost of £12. A company may seek to apply to the court for an order permitting noncompliance if
it believes that the application is not for a proper purpose. The public register at Companies House will be
searchable by any person free of charge.
The usual residential address of a PSC will not be publicly available, either on a company’s own register or
.
the register at Companies House, although it will be accessible by certain public bodies and (unless a PSC
makes a speciï¬c application) credit reference agencies. The PSC’s date of birth will be publicly available on a
company’s own PSC Register, but not on the register at Companies House (unless the company elects to
hold its own PSC Register there). The PSC Regulations also permit PSCs to seek further protection of their
personal information from public disclosure, provided that they can satisfy certain tests relating to there
being a serious risk of harm. This protection regime is based on the existing UK protection regime for
directors.
WHAT’S NEXT?
Companies and LLPs will need to put in place the necessary internal systems to deal with the new regime
and should begin taking reasonable steps to identify PSCs and relevant legal entities and preparing their
PSC Register to be ready for 6 April 2016, when the majority of the PSC Regulations and LLP Regulations
take effect.
Similarly, PSCs who wish to limit the information relating to them that will be publicly available
on the PSC Register should also begin preparing such applications.
Further amendments to the PSC regime are likely in order to bring it fully into line with the requirements of
the Fourth Money Laundering Directive, although such changes are unlikely until next year.
CONTACTS
If you have any questions or would like more information on the issues discussed in this LawFlash, please
contact any of the following Morgan Lewis lawyers:
London
Iain Wright
Ann-Marie Davies
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