Corporate & Investment

Corporate & Commercial

Company formation, governance, commercial contracts, and day-to-day legal support for management teams and decision-makers.


This practice is built for businesses that need counsel close to day-to-day commercial decision-making, not occasional contract review alone.

The practical value of this service

  1. Clearer documentation for decision-making and sign-off
  2. Contracts that support operations and negotiation
  3. Lower friction and dispute exposure

Typical scope of work

  1. Entity formation and internal restructurings
  2. Shareholder arrangements, board matters, and governance
  3. Commercial, service, supply, and distribution contracts
  4. Recurring legal support for management and execution

Who we advise

  • SMEs and mid-market companies
  • Family businesses and ownership groups
  • Foreign businesses operating in or entering Egypt

How we handle this kind of work

  1. IConnecting the contract to the real decision and execution path
  2. IIDrafting that management can actually use
  3. IIIAddressing friction points before they become disputes

What you can do on your own before any consultation

These are practical steps for anyone facing a matter of this type — whether they end up working with the firm or not. The goal is that you start prepared, and that any counsel you engage later costs you less.

  1. Define the outcome in one sentenceWrite down the result you actually want. "I want to incorporate a joint-stock company" or "I want to challenge a licence-refusal decision." Clarity from day one saves enormous time later.
  2. Gather the core documentsEvery legal matter starts with paperwork: national ID, commercial register, tax card, notarised powers of attorney, and any prior correspondence with the relevant authority.
  3. Identify the deadlines in playMost legal decisions carry a strict appeal window. Fifteen days for administrative grievances, sixty days for appeals, and so on. Check the date on every decision you've received.
  4. Know the other partiesWhich authority, company, or individual is on the other side — and in what legal capacity? The answer shapes jurisdiction and strategy.
  5. Write down what you've already triedHave you corresponded with the authority? Filed a prior request? Met another adviser? This information determines the right starting point.
  6. Form a rough sense of cost and timelineA good counsel lays out expected cost and stages at the first meeting. Ask about both before you commit.

Questions we're often asked

  • Do I need a lawyer for this type of matter?
    Not every matter needs one. Simple files with a clear government form you can handle yourself. But anything that affects investment, carries strict deadlines, requires contract drafting, or challenges a decision is worth a counsel.
  • What should I prepare before the first consultation?
    A two-paragraph written summary of the facts, copies of the core documents, and any prior decisions or correspondence. This shortens consultation time and sharpens the legal view.
  • How long do these proceedings typically take?
    Timeline varies considerably by matter type and authority involved. The first consultation gives a realistic estimate based on your specific facts.
  • How are law firms billed for this kind of work?
    Most common: a fixed fee per stage, hourly for open-ended engagements, or a percentage of transaction value for commercial matters. The structure is agreed at the start of the engagement.

Official authorities and references

Anyone dealing with this type of matter should know the official authorities involved. These are direct links to government portals — useful whether you work with us or not.

Services

Need a legal view on your own specific facts?

We guide investors and business owners from the first question to the outcome. If you don't need us, we hope the content above has served you anyway.

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