What Family Businesses Need To Know About The New Legal Framework Governing Their Operations In The UAE Only around 10 to 15% of family businesses in the UAE make it to the third generation.

By Kyra Motley

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According to figures cited by the UAE Ministry of Economy, up to 90% of private companies in the UAE are family businesses, contributing about 70% of the country's gross domestic product, and employing much of the region's workforce. However, only around 10 to 15% of family businesses in the UAE make it to the third generation.

Among the key challenges faced by family businesses is longevity of succession planning. When the business-owning head of a family passes away, and the business is inherited directly by multiple heirs, the ownership of the business can be fragmented, creating the potential for disputes between family members. If not resolved swiftly, this can cause disruption to the operation and growth of the underlying business. When viewed collectively, the potential for such disputes across the many family businesses in the UAE represents a threat not only to the businesses themselves, but to the wider economic growth of the region.

A case in point is the dispute that arose among the heirs of the late Majid Al Futtaim. Amidst reports of discord among the founder's heirs, and in light of the importance of this family-owned retail and leisure empire to Dubai's economy, UAE Vice President and Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai H.H. Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum appointed a judicial committee to mediate among the shareholders, and protect both the interests of the company and Dubai's economy during the transition of ownership following the founder's passing.

At a federal level, the UAE has until recently done little to regulate family businesses as distinct from other business structures. In particular, the federal legal infrastructure has historically made no provision allowing family businesses to be held within succession planning structures equivalent to the trusts, foundations, and other structures that, in other jurisdictions, have been used to mitigate these same succession risks for hundreds of years.

Related: Let the Family Build (And Then Let The Professionals Run)

It is against this backdrop that the UAE Government has introduced the much-anticipated Federal Decree-Law No. 37 of 2022 (FDL37/22). Broadly, the new family business law aims to support the sustainability and growth of family businesses, in turn supporting the commercial competitiveness of the UAE. FDL37/22 applies in all Emirates and free zones of the UAE, subject to any relevant local company laws, and its stated objectives -among others- can be listed as follows:

  • To set an inclusive and easy legal framework to regulate ownership and governance of family businesses
  • To facilitate their transfer between generations
  • To support continuity of family businesses
  • To provide the proper mechanisms for resolving disputes related to family businesses
  • To enhance the contribution of family businesses to the UAE's economy and its competitiveness

In a departure from existing rules not allowing a UAE company to create different classes of shares, FDL37/22 enables family businesses to create multiple classes of share, with the rights and privileges attaching to each to be determined by the business through its memorandum of association. All such classes entitle the holder to receive profits, but not all share classes need entitle the holder to voting rights. This ability to confer a form of ownership without voting rights may provide families with a useful means of granting ownership of their business to a greater number of family members, while reserving control over the management and operation of the business only to those family members equipped and incentivized to oversee its continued success in the ownership of the family.

Prior to FDL37/22, statutory pre-emption rules did not allow a shareholder to transfer shares without allowing all existing shareholders an opportunity to acquire the shares. FDL37/22 creates an exception whereby shareholders can sell or transfer shares to a spouse or first-degree relative, independently of these pre-emption rights. This should provide greater freedom to certain groups within families to restructure their shareholdings. The new law also gives family businesses greater powers to tailor the governing articles to support the pre-emption preferences of the family as a whole, including a mechanism for the business to buy back shares following an offer by a family member, or otherwise for the purpose of reducing its capital up to a maximum cap of 30% of its shares.

Whereas the previously applicable rules did not provide any mechanisms for resolving family disputes other than litigation in the courts or arbitration proceedings, FDL37/22 empowers families to consider alternatives means of resolving disputes in the first instance, including reconciliation through a committee of family members formed for this purpose. On a local level, the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) has set up the Global Family Business and Private Wealth Centre, and it has also implemented local legislation in the form of the Family Arrangements Regulations 2023. These regulations, effective as of 31 January 2023, provide a structure for the Centre's initiatives, and build on the changes brought in by FDL37/22.

Although as yet untested, FDL37/22 and the new DIFC Family Arrangements Regulations 2023 give family businesses a framework within which they are empowered to structure the management of their assets and entities in a way that is bespoke to the nuances of the family and the business in question, as well as to the nature of and challenges faced by family businesses, compared to other business structures in the UAE. There is a lot of discussion amongst the professional community at the moment about the new law, and it is anticipated that there will be a significant number of families reviewing structures in line with the new law, and considering succession planning strategies to protect their family business.

Related: For Family Businesses In The Middle East, Formalized Governance Can Help Create Lasting Legacies

Kyra Motley is Partner, Private Client and Tax, at Boodle Hatfield, a London law firm that has been trusted by wealthy families, property owners, and businesses to deliver exceptional legal advice.

Kyra specializes in multi-jurisdictional wealth planning, international tax and trusts, succession planning and family governance for high net worth and ultra high net worth clients, their families, as well as related advice to family offices. She has extensive experience in advising on wealth preservation and tax efficient structures in an international context, and she is well recognized for advising clients in relation to complex cross-border tax and estate planning for UK and non-UK domiciled individuals and families.

Many of Kyra’s clients are from the Middle East, particularly Kuwait, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE. Her commercial acumen, hands-on approach, attention to detail, and strong cultural understanding enables her to assume the role of trusted advisor to many families and individuals in the MENA region. Over the last 12 years, she has built a solid reputation managing global legal affairs, and she has particular expertise in structuring wealth so that the devolution complies with the Islamic Sharia principles of succession, where this is needed.

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