The Companies Act (Shipping and Aviation Cell Companies) Regulations were issued by the Minister for Economy, Investment and Small Businesses on 16th June 2020. These regulations cater for the use of cell companies also by companies operating in the shipping and aviation business.

What is a cell company?

A cell company is a company that may create within itself one or more cells in order to segregate and protect the cellular assets of the company. While this is not an innovative concept within the Maltese legal framework, since, by way of example, the Civil Code and the Securitisation Act have catered for the use of segregated cells by foundations1 and by securitization vehicles2 for quite some time, the possibility to use such entities in the shipping and aviation business is new. These recently-issued Regulations now offer such possibility also to cell companies operating in the shipping or aviation industries, the name of which must include "MAPCC" or "Mobile Assets Protected Cell Company".

What are the key benefits of shipping and aviation cell companies?

The use of this structure by companies operating in the shipping and aviation fields offer major benefits, such as:

  1. effective bankruptcy-remoteness, further to the transfer of assets from a company carrying out shipping or aviation business to a dedicated cell. As a result, the assets and liabilities arising out of the activities of a specific cell exclusively belong to that cell. This means that its assets are ring-fenced from the cellular assets and liabilities of others cells and of the core and that they cannot be used to satisfy liabilities that are not attributable to that particular cell;
  2. easier management and costs deriving from having only one board of directors and one set of memorandum and articles of association both for the core company an all its cells. In fact, notwithstanding that a cell company may have created one or more cells, a cell company is a single legal person and the cells so created do not enjoy a separate legal personality from the cell company;
  3. tax optimisation: the opportunity for the cell company and its cells3 to benefit from the Maltese full imputation tax system that reduces the total tax paid in Malta to 5% or lower wherever double taxation relief is claimed. Malta has a broad double tax treaty network4 which provide rules in respect of dividends, interest, royalties as well as rules on the elimination of double taxation;
  4. no restrictions on the identity of the asset owner, that does not need to be licensed or authorized by any supervisory entity.

Footnotes

1 Our company, Mandaris Trustees (Malta) Limited is duly authorized by the MFSA to act as trustee (https://www.mfsa.mt/financial-services-register/result/?id=11904) and administrator of private

foundations (https://www.mfsa.mt/financial-services-register/result/?id=11903)

2 Our company, Coprolin SCC plc, has successfully structured securitization transactions for several years (http://www.mandaris.ch/malta/assets/File/Publications/Securitisation%20Flyer updated.pdf)

Originally published 23 June, 2020

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.