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“In some areas of research there were also significant time savings. You get to what you are looking for more quickly, which all goes to the value of the product.”

Harper Mcleod

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Market Value meaning

What does Market Value mean?
Market value describes the price most likely to be achieved for an asset or liability on the valuation date in a sale between a willing buyer and a willing seller, dealing at arm’s length, after proper marketing, with both parties acting knowledgeably, prudently and without compulsion. This formulation is the benchmark used in professional valuation practice (RICS Valuation – Global Standards (Red Book) and International Valuation Standards) and is widely applied by UK and Irish courts and tribunals. It is used in real estate and asset valuations, corporate transactions, lending and security, financial reporting, insolvency, tax valuation (including CGT and IHT/CAT), and compulsory purchase. Key features include: a hypothetical but evidence-based transaction; adequate exposure to the market; and the exclusion of prices attributable solely to a particular purchaser’s special interest, unless shared by market participants. It is not a forced-sale price. Usage is broadly consistent across England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland. However, specific statutes or codes may prescribe their own tests or assumptions (for example, tax legislation and compulsory purchase rules, including the “no-scheme” world under the Land Compensation Act 1961 and Scottish, Northern Irish and Irish equivalents). In those contexts, the statutory definition and valuation date prevail.
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View the related Checklists about Market Value

CHECKLISTS
UK anti-counterfeiting and anti-piracy strategy checklist: enforcement options, HMRC and Trading Standards engagement, online/AI monitoring, budget and team management, precedents, website blocking, and success metrics

This Checklist covers the key considerations when formulating a strategy to combat counterfeiting and piracy. Use this Checklist together with Practice Note: Anti-counterfeiting and anti-piracy—strategy. Begin by evaluating how widespread the issue is. Consider who has been consulted: Internal teams close to the market, such as customer services dealing with consumer complaints External investigators gauging counterfeit prevalence across specific channels (online and in store) and carrying out test purchases Agencies including the Chartered Trading Standards Institute (‘Trading Standards’) and HMRC Internet service providers and website operators where targets largely trade online Be aware that staff or members of the public may spot fake goods in shops, market stalls, at events or while on holiday and may proactively alert the rights holder. Confirm whether the following key details have been established: Most affected territories Most affected products Health and safety concerns Degree of risk to consumers and brand value Principal perpetrators Any...

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CHECKLISTS
FCA Consumer Duty Fair Value: Checklist for PRIN 2A.4 Assessments Covering Manufacturers, Distributors, Target Markets, Pricing, Vulnerable Customers, Closed Products and Governance

This checklist helps practitioners grasp and consistently apply the FCA’s Consumer Duty requirements for evidencing fair value effectively. It should be considered alongside other relevant practical Consumer Duty materials and references: for information on the main elements of the Consumer Duty with general application, see Practice Note: The FCA Consumer Duty—essentials; also for a suite of sectoral guidance and checklists see: Consumer protection and FCA Consumer Duty—overview for key developments relating to the FCA’s Consumer Duty, see: The FCA Consumer Duty—timeline Background Under the Consumer Duty, four outcomes cover the central and key aspects of the firm–customer relationship. The second outcome is the Price and Value Outcome, which is concerned with an overarching obligation that products must deliver ‘fair value’ to customers. Under PRIN 2A.4: value is the relationship between the amount paid by a retail customer for the product and the benefits they can reasonably expect to receive from the product; and a product provides fair value...

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CHECKLISTS
Power purchase agreements with licensed suppliers: a practitioners’ checklist on term, pricing, volumes, renewable/embedded benefits, exclusivity, commissioning, metering, termination, guarantees and assignment

Power purchase agreements (PPAs), and the consequent checklist considerations, will differ according to several elements, such as the generation technology adopted and, notably, whether any feedstock or fuel is necessary to run the finished plant. The nature of the deal—be it a short-term trading arrangement or a longer-term contract required to support financing—will likewise be influential. This Checklist proceeds on the basis of a ‘conventional’ PPA with a licensed supplier as the counterparty. Other forms exist, including corporate PPAs where the buyer is an end user, potentially linked to the plant by a private wire. For additional detail on corporate PPAs, see Practice Note: Corporate Power Purchase Agreements—an introduction to structuring power purchase arrangements between large energy users and remotely located generators. What is/check the duration of the agreement? Where a PPA is needed to underpin external financing for a new generating asset, the PPA term should, as far as practicable, ideally align with the tenor of any loans advanced to fund the scheme and the associated project...

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FLOWCHARTS
Internal Communications Planning: Step-by-Step Flowchart for Lawyers, with Practice Note and Precedent

During any due diligence on acquiring a leasehold interest in land, it is vital to review whether the tenant may assign, underlet, or charge the premises. Provisions that are too restrictive may: adversely affect the buyer’s ability to dispose of their interest in the property in the future create a burden for day-to-day property management impact the overall value of the property to the buyer This Checklist is directed chiefly at leases granted for a reasonably long term at an annual market rent. For further guidance on: building leases, see Practice Note: Building leases—alienation side-by-side or geared rent leases, see Practice Note: Headlease rent linked to underlease rents long leases granted for a premium at a peppercorn rent where the leasehold interest is virtually equivalent to a freehold interest, see Precedent: Long lease of whole of commercial premises at a premium Assignment Can the tenant assign the lease and is the landlord’s consent...

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FLOWCHARTS
JCT Design and Build 2011: Interim (Periodic) Payment Process—Alternative B Flowchart to Practical Completion [Archived]

Checklist This Checklist applies when acquiring a long leasehold interest carrying a capital value, rather than a shorter tenancy at an open market rent, which is unlikely to attract any capital value. A purchaser’s solicitor should examine the landlord’s right to forfeit the lease, as in some situations particular forfeiture clauses can render a lease unacceptable as security to a lender and, in turn, unsuitable for purchase. Could the landlord exercise forfeiture upon the tenant’s insolvency? Where the landlord holds a right to forfeit on a tenant insolvency event, the property will not be acceptable security to a lender and is therefore inappropriate as an investment acquisition. Consequently, such a lease is neither appropriate for lending purposes nor for any purchase...

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NEWS
Great Britain energy law weekly update – 2 May 2024: Ofgem consultations, DESNZ heat networks, flexibility markets, renewables co-location, nuclear AI, EU Net-Zero Industry Act

In this issue Key developments and materials Electricity and gas market regulation and licensing Networks and network connections Renewable energy Conventional power, waste to energy, biomass, and CHP projects Nuclear energy International energy LexTalk®Energy: a Lexis®Nexis community Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Dates for your diary Trackers Key developments and materials National Grid has unveiled a strategic tie-up between its Distribution System Operator (DSO) and Electron to boost the scale and value of flexibility for system operators and flexibility service providers (FSPs) by enabling market interoperability. Electron will link its flexibility market platform, ElectronConnect, with the DSO’s Market Gateway, giving FSPs wider choice in how they access and engage with flexibility on the electricity distribution network. The collaboration also aims to reduce entry hurdles and drive broader market participation. See: LNB News 02/05/2024 7. Electricity and gas market regulation and licensing Ofgem has opened a consultation...

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NEWS
GB energy regulatory update—TPIs regulation, SoLR Levy Offset, early competition and OHA pilot, DCC licence decisions, EU Energy Efficiency Directive guidance—26 September 2024

In this issue: Electricity and gas market regulation and licensing Networks and network connections Renewable energy Capacity Market, balancing services and energy system flexibility International energy Daily and weekly news alerts Dates for your diary Trackers Electricity and gas market regulation and licensing DESNZ launches consultation on regulating TPIs in the retail energy market The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero has opened a consultation to bring Third Party Intermediaries in the retail energy market under regulation, bolstering consumer protection and aiding the shift to a cleaner energy system. Triggered by cases of consumers and businesses being targeted by unregulated rogue brokers and other TPIs, this forms part of the government’s ongoing support for Ofgem to develop an effective market for non-domestic customers, alongside implementing recommendations from Ofgem’s July 2023 non-domestic policy consultation. The consultation closes on 15 November 2024. See: LNB News 20/09/2024 36. Ofgem launches statutory consultation on SoLR Levy Offset...

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NEWS
Energy regulation update for GB and EU: Ofgem, DESNZ grid connections, heat networks, smart metering, nuclear CfDs, EU 2040 target (12 March 2026)

In this issue: Key developments and materials Electricity and gas market regulation, licensing and taxation Networks and network connections Capacity Market, balancing services and energy system flexibility Nuclear energy Oil and gas International energy New and updated content Dates for your diary Trackers Energy resources on Lexis+® Daily and weekly news alerts Key developments and materials DESNZ announces 100 schools now have Great British Energy solar panels DESNZ confirmed that Great British Energy solar arrays are now fitted at 100 schools and colleges nationwide. By summer 2026, roughly 250 institutions will benefit through a focused deployment that gives precedence to deprived communities in the North East, West Midlands and North West, and guarantees a minimum of ten schools in each English region. Across their lifespan, these installations are expected to deliver around £220m in cumulative savings for the 250 schools and colleges, allowing funds to be redirected into teaching spaces. See:...

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View the related Practice Notes about Market Value

PRACTICE NOTES
United Kingdom Pensions Advice Allowance: scope, scheme applicability, authorised payment conditions, tax and VAT, enforcement, and interaction with adviser charging

What is the Pensions Advice Allowance? Following consultation in 2016/17, the government brought in, from 6 April 2017, the Pensions Advice Allowance. It enables eligible pension scheme members to withdraw a fixed sum from their pension pot tax-free to cover holistic retirement advice. At the member’s instruction, the scheme may therefore reduce the value of the member’s pot by the advice fee and pay the funds straight to the member’s adviser. This measure stemmed from the Financial Advice Market Review, which highlighted an advice gap affecting people who require retirement planning support but cannot meet the cost from net-of-tax income or savings. It is available in addition to other existing advice allowances and payment routes for advice. These include adviser charging, which does not permit pension monies to be used to fund holistic retirement advice. For further details, see Other types of pensions advice measures below. The government’s aim is to help those preparing for retirement to use the Pensions Advice Allowance to fund holistic...

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK secondary buyouts in private equity: structures, financing, management consideration, tax issues, transaction steps and exit options

For both the investing private equity fund and the target’s leadership, the prime lure of a private equity-backed buyout is the chance to crystallise a meaningful gain on exit. There are several potential paths to exit from such an investment, most typically: a trade sale to another company operating within the same sector, a flotation (IPO), or a secondary buyout (SBO). The ultimate route will hinge on considerations such as public market appetite for a listing and whether credible purchasers are available. Management often influence the decision, and may favour renewed private equity support via an SBO when the business model and prevailing market backdrop align. A secondary buyout (SBO) is, in essence, a private equity-backed acquisition of a company that has already undergone a private equity-backed buyout. In an SBO, the existing private equity owner exits its stake, though the current management team can remain in post afterwards. Alternatively, fresh management might be appointed, or a blend of old and new...

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK Public M&A 2018: Trends in Takeover Code deals, value, structures, sectors, hostile activity, private equity, foreign bidders, and legal/regulatory developments (Brexit)

Public M&A deals 2018—UK––Market Standards Trend Report [Archived] ARCHIVED: This content was published in 2019 and is not maintained. The Market Standards trend report delivers in-depth analysis of the 42 firm and 49 possible offer announcements for companies governed by the Takeover Code in 2018. It shares insight on public M&A patterns and what we might anticipate in 2019 and thereafter. What does the Market Standards trend report cover? deal structures value and volume of deals hostile takeover activity industry focus public-to-private transactions UK and overseas bidder activity post-offer undertakings disclosure of bidder’s intentions legal and regulatory developments The report also examines high-profile transactions, including Melrose’s hostile offer for GKN and the competing...

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View the related Precedents about Market Value

PRECEDENTS
Gazette Notice for Rights Issue: Overseas Shareholders Without UK/EEA Address—Inspection and Collection of Prospectus and Provisional Allotment Letters (Companies Act 2006, s.562(3))

[ insert name of company ] plc (Registered in [ insert country of incorporation ] with number [ insert company number ]) [ insert description of rights issue, eg Proposed [ insert offer ratio, eg 5 for 8 ] rights issue of [ insert total number new shares to be issued ] new ordinary shares of [ insert nominal value ] each at [ insert offer price ] per ordinary share ] This notice is issued, in accordance with section 562(3) of the Companies Act 2006, to every person whose name appears on the register at the close of business on [ insert date ] (the Rights Issue Record Date) as a holder of ordinary shares of [ insert nominal value ] each (the Ordinary Shares) in [ insert name of company ] plc (the Company) who does not have a registered address in the UK or an EEA State and has...

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PRECEDENTS
Gazette notice template: payment out of capital for off-market share buyback by a private limited company (Companies Act 2006 Pt 18 Ch 5, s.719)

Company number: [ insert number ] [ insert company name ] limited (the Company) PURCHASE OF OWN SHARES OUT OF CAPITAL The Company gives notice under section 719 CA 2006 that: On [ insert date ], the Company passed a special resolution approving a payment out of capital under section 716 CA 2006 to purchase [ insert number ] [ insert class ] shares of [ insert nominal value ] each in its capital; The permissible capital payment (section 710 CA 2006) for the purchase is £[ insert amount ]; The directors’ statement and the auditor’s report required by section 714 CA 2006, regarding the proposed payment out of capital, are available for inspection at [ [ insert address of the Company’s registered office ] OR [ insert details of the Company’s alternative inspection location complying with CA 2006, ss 720, 1136 and the Companies (Company Records) Regulations 2008, SI 2008/3006, reg 3 ] ]; Any Company creditor may, within five weeks...

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PRECEDENTS
Prospectus verification notes template for UK secondary capital raisings (placings, open offers and rights issues) on the FCA Official List and London Stock Exchange Main Market

VERIFICATION NOTES These verification notes concern the prospectus (the Prospectus ) to be issued in connection with the proposed [ placing OR placing and open offer OR rights issue ] ( Capital Raising ) of [ up to ] [ insert number ] new [ insert class ] shares of [ insert nominal value ] each (the Shares ) of [ insert name of the Company ] together with the admission of the Shares to listing on the Official List of the Financial Conduct Authority ( FCA ) and to trading on the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange ( Main Market ). These Verification Notes (the Notes ) have been prepared by [ insert details of Company's solicitors ] for the purposes of protecting the Company, the directors of the Company (the Directors ) [ , the Proposed Directors of the Company (the Proposed Directors ) ] and others involved with the Capital Raising and the drafting of the Prospectus, which relates to the application for the...

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View the related Q&As about Market Value

Q&As
Mystery box prize promotions with stated retail value: permitted under Gambling Act 2005, Gambling Commission and Advertising Standards?

For the purposes of the Gambling Act 2005 (GA 2005) Under GA 2005, s 3, gambling encompasses ‘gaming’, ‘betting’ and taking part in a ‘lottery’. ‘Gaming’ is defined in GA 2005, s 6 as playing a game of chance for a prize under that provision. A game of chance covers the following: a game that contains both an element of chance and an element of skill, a game where the element of chance can be eliminated by superlative skill, and a game presented as involving an element of chance, but it does not include a sport. There must be some element of chance and the prospect of winning a ‘prize’ for the activity to qualify. The Q&A does not indicate the setting in which the mystery box of prizes is being offered to participants. If the prize is to be obtained by taking part in a game of chance as described in GA 2005, s 6, it will fall within the...

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Q&As
Deed of Appropriation: when and to whom—second estate property sale

Sale by PRs or appropriation to beneficiaries We understand you are asking when it is better for the personal representatives (PRs) to dispose of an estate property, or instead to appropriate it to the beneficiaries so that they handle the sale themselves. This choice typically arises where: the beneficiary(ies) has/have part or all of their capital gains tax (CGT) annual exemption available the beneficiary(ies) will pay CGT at 18% on any part of a gain the beneficiary(ies) has/have losses available to offset against any gain the sale will make a loss and the PRs will not be making any further disposals that may produce gains to utilise the loss A death is not usually a chargeable occasion for CGT. For these purposes the PRs are treated as acquiring the assets at market value on the date of death; effectively, all prior accrued gains are eliminated and the PRs start again with a clean slate...

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Q&As
LPA attorney/co-owner buying donor’s share: sign both or trustee?

The following Q&A addresses this question: Is a sole LPA attorney permitted to purchase real property from the donor where the donor lacks mental capacity? We also direct you to: Subtopic: Lasting powers of attorney—overview (and in particular, see Practice Note: LPAs—the attorney's duties and powers) Topic: Court of Protection Commentary: Re Buckley: The Public Guardian v C: Cretney and Lush on Lasting and Enduring Powers of Attorney...

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