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Quantified financial benefits statement (QFBS) (Code definition) meaning

What does Quantified financial benefits statement (QFBS) (Code definition) mean?
A quantified financial benefits statement (QFBS) is a numerical estimate of financial gains (such as synergies, cost savings or other measures) presented in a takeover context to inform shareholders and the market. Under the City Code on Takeovers and Mergers (UK Takeover Code), a QFBS means either: (a) a statement by a securities exchange offeror or the offeree quantifying financial benefits expected to accrue to the enlarged group if the offer succeeds; or (b) a statement by the offeree quantifying financial benefits expected to accrue to the offeree from cost-saving or other measures and/or a transaction the offeree proposes to implement if the offer is withdrawn or lapses. QFBSs are governed by Rule 28, which also applies to profit forecasts. Rule 28.3 requires that a profit forecast or QFBS be properly compiled and prepared with due care and consideration. In practice, QFBSs appear in offer documents, response circulars and announcements, and are scrutinised by the Panel on Takeovers and Mergers. The concept is Code-defined (not statutory), and applies consistently across England & Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. In Ireland, comparable requirements under the Irish Takeover Rules apply to statements quantifying expected financial benefits in takeovers, and market practice is broadly aligned.
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View the related Checklists about Quantified financial benefits statement (QFBS) (Code definition)

CHECKLISTS
English law LMA par secondary loan trades: pre-trade due diligence and settlement guide (transfer criteria, RFR/IBOR interest and DSC, KYC, tax, regulatory, sub-participations, BISO)

STOP PRESS The Loan Market Association (LMA) has released refreshed editions of the standard terms and conditions for Par and Distressed Trade Transactions, the complete set of Funded Participation and Risk Participation Agreements, and the Secondary Debt Trading Documentation User Guide, with effect from 17 March 2026. The changes remove LIBOR references, update IBOR rate definitions and the Target2 definition, and revise ERISA representations to incorporate additional exemptions to the prohibited transaction rules under ERISA and the US Internal Revenue Code. The revised documentation is available exclusively to LMA members, accessible via the LMA’s Documentation Hub. These publications are updated versions issued by the LMA. Summary A core principle of trading under the LMA protocol is that ‘Trade is a Trade’; i.e. once a trade is struck—including an oral contract agreed by telephone—it is binding, and subsequent developments, even if adverse to one or both parties, do not entitle either party to cancel or ‘break’ the trade. By way of example, a failure to secure consent for...

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CHECKLISTS
LMA distressed secondary bank debt/claims: pre-trade due diligence and key elections on transfers, settlement, interest, DSC, unfunded commitments, tax/regulatory issues (including 2026 updates)

STOP PRESS: The Loan Market Association (LMA) has issued refreshed versions of the standard terms and conditions for Par and Distressed Trade Transactions, the complete suite of Funded Participation and Risk Participation Agreements, and the Secondary Debt Trading Documentation User Guide, all coming into force on 17 March 2026. Changes comprise the deletion of LIBOR references, updates to IBOR rate definitions and the Target2 definition, plus revised ERISA representations that fold in further exemptions to the prohibited transaction rules under ERISA and the US Internal Revenue Code. The new materials are accessible solely to LMA members via the LMA’s Documentation Hub. Summary A core principle of trading under the LMA protocol is that ‘a Trade is a Trade’: once a trade is concluded (which may include an oral agreement reached by telephone), it is binding, and later events that may disadvantage one or both parties do not permit either side to rescind or ‘break’ it. For instance, not securing consent for an assignment or novation of the...

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NEWS
IP weekly update: foreign performers' PPR; Athleta and YouTube Shorts rulings; EPO MyEPO changes; SPC Windsor Framework regulations; Teva Copaxone fine; EU packaging rules; IPO crime survey

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NEWS
EU law weekly round-up—14 March 2024: AI Act adopted, DMA enforcement, DORA RTS, MiFID II amendments, consumer protection, data protection decisions, and environmental/energy initiatives

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NEWS
EU AI Act GPAI Guidelines: scope, 10^23 FLOPs threshold, provider and modifier duties (including non‑EU), open‑source exemptions, code of practice, compute estimation and compliance timelines

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK Film and Television Law Glossary: Terms C–D—copyright, collecting societies, broadcasting, distribution

Film and TV glossary A–B Film and TV glossary E–H Film and TV glossary I–L Film and TV glossary M–P Film and TV glossary R–S Film and TV glossary T–W CAP Code for non-broadcast media The UK Code of Non-broadcast Advertising and Direct & Promotional Marketing (the CAP Code) serves as the principal framework governing non-broadcast adverts, promotional sales activity and direct marketing messages. It is drafted by the Committee on Advertising Practice (CAP), a self-regulatory body whose membership comprises organisations representing advertising, sales promotion, direct marketing and media industries. The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) polices the CAP Code and may require the withdrawal or amendment of any advertisement that contravenes these standards. Refer to Practice Note: Advertising law and regulation. Channel 4 Channel 4 operates as a ‘publisher-broadcaster’: it produces no programmes internally, commissioning content from production companies across the UK. Cinematograph film Under the Copyright Act 1956 (CA 1956), films gained protection as...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Publication, laying and website disclosure of UK companies' annual accounts and reports: Companies Act 2006, FCA DTR/Listing Rules, UKCG Code and AIM Rules—timing, signatures, penalties, NSM and ESEF

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PRACTICE NOTES
Share-based remuneration for UK non-executive directors: independence, employees’ share scheme status, Listing/AIM, UK MAR, pre-emption, financial assistance, FSMA, disclosure and practical structuring options

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PRECEDENTS
Corporate criminal liability: senior manager attribution, relevant economic offences, consequences, procedures and reporting under the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023

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PRECEDENTS
UK Takeover Code—offer document precedent for recommended all-share (share-for-share) offers: drafting for New Offeror Shares, prospectus, admission, conditions, settlement, overseas shareholders and disclosure

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