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Last updated: 29 April 2026, Updated to reflect SECP guidance and SRO amendments published April 2026. Readers should confirm with counsel for transaction‑specific advice.
The Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) published its updated “Guidelines for Mergers and Amalgamations” on 24 April 2026, fundamentally reshaping the compliance landscape for SECP mergers and amalgamations 2026 Pakistan transactions. Running alongside the guidelines, SRO 669(I)/2026 has introduced materially tighter anti‑money‑laundering (AML) and beneficial‑ownership (BO) disclosure obligations that apply to every merger, scheme of arrangement and significant asset transfer filed with the Commission. Provincial developments, notably Punjab’s waiver of stamp duty on SECP‑approved schemes, add further procedural variables that deal teams must now map into their closing timelines.
This guide translates the full package of 2026 changes into actionable checklists, thresholds, worked examples and a 90‑day sample timeline that general counsel, CFOs, private equity sponsors and external advisers can deploy immediately.
Key takeaway: The April 2026 SECP guidance and related SRO amendments create new filing obligations, expand AML/BO verification requirements and tighten the documentary burden for every merger or amalgamation application in Pakistan.
The principal changes that deal teams must absorb are:
What deal teams must do this week:
Key takeaway: Any scheme of arrangement, merger or amalgamation involving a company registered under the Companies Act, 2017 must be sanctioned by the SECP (or, where applicable, the court). The practical question is which SECP process applies and whether pre‑merger clearance is triggered.
| Trigger criterion | Threshold / condition | Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Scheme of arrangement (merger / amalgamation / demerger) | Any scheme involving transfer of undertaking or shares between two or more companies | SECP application mandatory under the Companies Act, 2017; full documentary pack required |
| Acquisition of significant assets | Transfer of substantially all assets of one entity to another as part of a restructuring | SECP sanction required if structured as a scheme; voluntary pre‑clearance recommended if structured as an asset‑sale to avoid re‑characterisation risk |
| Cross‑border element | Foreign acquirer, foreign target subsidiary or funds originating from outside Pakistan | Pre‑filing consultation now mandatory under April 2026 guidance; additional AML/BO documentation per SRO 669(I)/2026 |
| Listed company involvement | Any party listed on the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) | SECP filing plus PSX notifications; minority‑shareholder impact assessment and separate exchange timeline |
Key takeaway: The updated guidelines consolidate and expand the SECP’s procedural requirements for schemes of arrangement, mergers and amalgamations, with particular emphasis on documentation, pre‑filing engagement and the AML compliance overlay introduced by SRO 669(I)/2026.
The SECP’s “Guidelines for Mergers and Amalgamations” published on 24 April 2026 represent the most significant restatement of SECP M&A procedure in several years. The guidance operates within the statutory framework of the Companies Act, 2017 and should be read alongside the SECP’s existing FAQs on mergers and winding‑up.
The April 2026 guidance now expressly requires the following at the point of filing:
The guidance references the SECP’s statutory power under the Companies Act, 2017 to reject or defer incomplete applications. The likely practical effect will be that teams filing without the prescribed BO declaration or pre‑filing consultation evidence can expect their application to be returned, resetting the review clock and potentially jeopardising deal timelines. Industry observers expect the SECP to enforce these requirements rigorously in the first wave of post‑guidance filings to establish compliance norms.
Key takeaway: SRO 669(I)/2026 introduces mandatory beneficial‑ownership verification, enhanced due diligence triggers and documentation‑retention obligations that apply specifically to M&A due diligence in Pakistan.
This SRO represents the SECP’s alignment of corporate restructuring procedures with Pakistan’s broader AML/CFT framework. Every entity filing a merger or amalgamation application must now complete the following steps:
| Red flag | Action required |
|---|---|
| BO cannot be identified despite reasonable steps | Escalate to compliance committee; consider filing a suspicious transaction report (STR) before proceeding |
| Source of funds inconsistent with BO’s known profile | Request additional documentary evidence; do not proceed until satisfied |
| BO resident in FATF grey‑list or high‑risk jurisdiction | Mandatory EDD; senior management sign‑off required before filing |
| Nominee shareholder or trust structure with opaque terms | Full disclosure of nominee/trust deed required; verify underlying beneficiary identity |
| Adverse media hits on any party principal | Document findings; legal review to assess materiality; disclose to SECP if relevant to scheme approval |
The SRO’s requirements apply to both buyer‑side and seller‑side entities. Early indications suggest that the SECP will treat BO verification failures as grounds for deferring scheme approval, making upfront compliance essential to protecting deal timelines.
Key takeaway: A well‑prepared filing under the 2026 guidance should budget approximately 60–90 days from first submission to SECP sanction, though complex or cross‑border deals may take longer.
| Day | Milestone | Key documents / actions |
|---|---|---|
| Day 0–7 | Pre‑filing preparation | Engage counsel; prepare BO declarations; compile related‑party schedule; draft scheme document |
| Day 7–14 | Pre‑filing consultation (if required) | Submit consultation request to SECP Company Law Division; receive acknowledgement and preliminary guidance |
| Day 14–21 | Board and shareholder approvals | Board resolutions; EGM notices; special resolution for scheme approval |
| Day 21–28 | Formal SECP application | Submit full application pack: scheme document, BO declarations, AML checklist, source‑of‑funds certificate, related‑party schedule, minority impact assessment, prescribed fee |
| Day 28–42 | SECP initial review | SECP reviews completeness; may issue queries or request additional information (respond within 7 days of each query) |
| Day 42–56 | SECP queries and supplemental filings | Address SECP observations; file supplemental documents; liaise with sector regulators if applicable |
| Day 56–70 | SECP hearing (if required) | Attend hearing; present scheme rationale; address minority‑shareholder or creditor objections |
| Day 70–80 | SECP sanction order | Receive formal sanction; file certified copy with Registrar of Companies |
| Day 80–90 | Post‑sanction steps | File with PSX (listed companies); attend to stamp‑duty obligations; update statutory registers; notify sector regulators |
Industry observers expect that straightforward domestic schemes with complete documentation will receive SECP sanction within 60–75 days under the 2026 guidance. Cross‑border schemes or those involving listed companies should budget 90 days or more. Three practical tactics can compress timelines:
Punjab’s decision to waive stamp duty on SECP‑approved and court‑approved schemes of arrangement has generated significant interest among deal teams. As reported by Business Recorder and confirmed by an SECP press release, this waiver eliminates what was previously a material transaction cost for schemes involving Punjab‑registered entities. However, teams must confirm that the waiver applies to their specific scheme structure and that all post‑sanction filings are completed within any time limits attached to the provincial notification. Other provinces have not yet matched Punjab’s approach, so multi‑province transactions require stamp‑duty analysis on a province‑by‑province basis.
Key takeaway: Proactive structuring, including conditional closings, escrow arrangements and staged acquisitions, can significantly reduce the risk of SECP delays under the 2026 framework for mergers and acquisitions Pakistan 2026.
Key takeaway: Sector‑specific regulators impose additional consent requirements that must run in parallel with the SECP process. Failing to engage sector regulators early is one of the most common causes of deal delay in corporate restructuring Pakistan transactions.
| Entity type | SECP filing required? | AML / Beneficial‑Ownership requirements (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Private limited company (local) | Yes, where scheme of arrangement or significant asset transfer is used; SECP sanction required if thresholds met | Standard AML checks; verify ultimate BO; enhanced checks if foreign investors or high‑risk jurisdictions involved |
| Public listed company | Yes, SECP filing plus PSX notifications; stricter disclosure and minority‑shareholder protections | Enhanced BO disclosures; PSX may require additional filings and timeline coordination |
| Banks / NBFCs / financial institutions | SECP filing plus sector‑regulator (SBP) approval; stricter prudential conditions likely | Highest AML scrutiny, expect enhanced due diligence and SBP coordination |
| Foreign acquirers / cross‑border deals | SECP review plus mandatory pre‑filing consultation; may trigger separate FDI screening or SBP approval | Full BO verification of foreign entities and all natural‑person beneficial owners; source‑of‑funds proof required at filing |
The April 2026 package of SECP mergers and amalgamations 2026 Pakistan changes demands immediate action from every deal team with a live or pipeline transaction. The filing checklist, thresholds table and 90‑day timeline set out in this guide provide a practical starting framework, but every transaction carries unique structural, sectoral and jurisdictional variables that require tailored legal analysis.
To discuss how these changes affect your specific transaction, explore the M&A in Pakistan practice area or find a Pakistan M&A lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mustafa Munir Ahmed at Legal Oracles, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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