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Jauregui, Navarrete y Nader was
founded in 1975 and is one of Mexico's
foremost law firms specialized in international business transactions. The
Firm is a leading practitioner in the areas of corporate and commercial law,
finance, mergers & acquisitions, banking, insurance, antitrust, energy
oil and gas, telecommunications, securities, project finance, infrastructure,
equity investments, joint ventures, strategic alliances, taxation,
privatizations, real estate, corporate reorganizations, international trade
(including AD/CVD regulations), intellectual property, healthcare, restructurings
and workouts, transportation, corporate and advertising litigation,
environmental law, arbitration and litigation, and general corporate work.
The Firm consists of sixteen partners, three of counsel, more than fifty
associates and over twenty pre-graduate associates, making it one of Mexico's
largest corporate law firms.
The Firm represents domestic and foreign clients involved in a wide
range of joint ventures, investments and economic activities, including
industry, trade and services. The Firm has consistently implemented
innovative transactions and is a market leader in advising highly-regulated
entities and in structuring foreign equity investments in those companies. We
are also a major provider of legal services in privatizations of
government-owned companies of all types and of public services, and in
advising and assisting clients in all steps of qualifications for public bid
processes and negotiations of procurement, services, infrastructure and other
kinds of agreements with government entities. The Firm has also advised
foreign governmental entities, including the US Department of Commerce in
connection with the negotiation of various Chapters of NAFTA and the US
Department of the Treasury in the US$20 billion emergency financial package
for Mexico
in 1995.
We are currently advising a number of clients exploring private equity
investments, financings, mergers, acquisitions and investment possibilities
in areas where traditionally no private investment had been permitted, such
as telecommunications, secondary petrochemicals, energy, power generation and
natural gas distribution and transportation projects.
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