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  • videocam On-Demand
  • signal_cellular_alt Intermediate
  • card_travel International
  • schedule 90 minutes

Structuring International Contracts: Core Provisions, Jurisdictional Issues, Remedies, Drafting to Minimize Risk

Choice of Law, Dispute Resolution, Terms of Art, and More

$297.00

This course is $0 with these passes:

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Description

For U.S. companies, the international marketplace offers potential for profitable markets. In exchange for such opportunities, however, companies should expect a broad array of risks and performance challenges to which they have previously been unexposed.

In the wake of the pandemic and ongoing international supply chain issues, companies and counsel have a heightened awareness of the importance of contract terms, and careful consideration should be paid to remedies when parties cannot meet contractual obligations.

Lawyers responsible for drafting and negotiating contracts that minimize their clients' exposure abroad need to consider unique obstacles encountered when operating overseas.

Listen as our panel of experienced international trade attorneys discusses the legal risks that are peculiar to international contracting and the key contract provisions that mitigate these risks and position businesses for success overseas. In doing so, our panelists will leverage their extensive experience abroad and reference instances in which their effective lawyering led to international commercial success for their clients.

Presented By

Jonathan Bench
Partner, Chair Corporate Practice Group
Kirton Mcconkie Pc - Salt Lake City

Mr. Bench helps entrepreneurs, companies, and venture capital and private equity funds with international and domestic business transactions. His clientele stretches across Asia, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and the Americas. National and global trade organizations regularly invite Mr. Bench to speak regarding international business transactions, particularly foreign direct investment to and from the U.S. and China. He is an emerging legal expert in the fast-moving and complex web3 ecosystem, including business and regulatory issues surrounding decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), smart contracts, decentralized finance (defi), cryptocurrencies, coins, and tokens, including non-fungible tokens (NFTs). He has worked on wide-ranging blockchain projects involving various international DAO communities, NFT artists and studios, layer-2 blockchain developers, metaverse companies, and celebrity brand influencers.

Andrew M. Danas
Partner
Grove Jaskiewicz & Cobert, LLP

Mr. Danas represents clients on a wide variety of general commercial and regulatory issues. He has a specialized knowledge of legal issues involving companies engaged in international trade and transportation. Mr. Danas regularly counsels companies on the corporate, commercial, and regulatory obligations they may have both in the U.S. and abroad.  He regularly advises and represents clients in their dealings with federal agencies of the U.S. government. He assists clients in obtaining government licenses and bonds and has represented them in government investigations and litigation. He has also assisted clients on legislative matters and has testified before the U.S. Congress on their behalf. A frequent speaker on business matters related to international commerce, Mr. Danas publishes regularly in professional and academic journals. He is also active in a number of professional organizations in a leadership capacity.  Mr. Danas is the current Division Chair for the Trade, International Organizations, and Regulatory Practices Division of the American Bar Association International Law Section. His previous leadership positions in the ABA ILS include three consecutive terms as both the Co-Chair of the International Contracts Committee and the International Transportation Committee.  He is also Co-Chair of the Antitrust and Unfair Trade Practices Committee of the Transportation Lawyers Association and the Chair of the Management Committee of the EALG Network of International Law Firms, which has member law firms in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, South America, and the United States.

Phyllicia Hoffman Tanenbaum
Attorney
Fluet

Ms. Tanenbaum counsels clients ranging from startups to large, publicly traded corporations in various industries, including government contracting. As part of her practice, Ms. Tanenbaum assists companies through all stages of the company’s life cycle, including handling formation and governance issues, as well as drafting and negotiating shareholder agreements, asset and equity purchase agreements, financing agreements, synthetic equity and other executive compensation plans, and nondisclosure agreements. She also supports businesses in complex commercial transactions involving commercial lending, mergers and acquisitions, corporate reorganizations, and private investment and venture capital transactions and advises on matters related to creditors’ rights.

Credit Information
  • This 90-minute webinar is eligible in most states for 1.5 CLE credits.


  • Live Online


    On Demand

Date + Time

  • event

    Wednesday, June 12, 2024

  • schedule

    1:00 p.m. ET./10:00 a.m. PT

  1. Primary risks
    1. Non-payment
    2. Non-delivery/nonperformance
    3. Violation of U.S. laws and regulations
    4. Performance bonds
    5. Liquidated damages
    6. Local presence requirements
    7. Local representative malfeasance
    8. Offsets
    9. Tax liability
  2. Key contract provisions
    1. Exclusivity
    2. Territory
    3. Bases of termination
    4. In-country enforcement
    5. Customer support
    6. Anti-boycott
    7. Non-circumvention
    8. Excess inventory
    9. Compliance with U.S. and Local laws and regulations
    10. Tax
    11. Import/export fees
    12. Translation concerns
  3. Dispute resolution
    1. Jurisdiction
    2. Bases of termination
  4. Exclusivity
    1. Intellectual property
    2. Restrictive covenants
    3. Nonassignment
    4. Indemnification
  5. Structuring strategies
    1. The long-term contract vision
    2. Joint ventures
    3. Local subsidiaries
    4. In-country support
  6. In-country cooperation vehicles

The panel will review these and other key issues:

  • What are the unique challenges presented by international business transactions that impact the structure of the international agreement?
  • What are the essential contract provisions to consider when negotiating an international agreement?
  • What strategies should be employed when structuring an international agreement?