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nominee shareholder risks thailand

Thailand 2026 Nominee Crackdown, What Lenders and Foreign Investors Must Do to Protect Financing and Enforce Security

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The nominee shareholder risks Thailand now presents to lenders and foreign investors have escalated sharply following the 2026 amendments to the Foreign Business Act (FBA) and related company-law reform proposals. These changes introduce explicit criminal penalties for nominee arrangements, expand the government’s power to confiscate assets held through non-compliant structures, and empower the Ministry of Commerce to suspend or revoke business licences on an administrative basis. For banks, private credit funds and institutional investors with Thai exposure, the reforms transform what was previously a grey-area compliance concern into a concrete counterparty, security and enforcement risk that demands immediate action across lending portfolios.

Executive Summary and Immediate Actions

The nominee crackdown 2026 reforms require lenders and investors to reassess Thai-linked exposures without delay. Below is a rapid-action framework for credit and compliance teams.

  • What changed. The 2026 FBA amendments criminalise the use of Thai nationals or entities as nominee shareholders for foreign-controlled businesses in restricted sectors. Penalties now include imprisonment and court-ordered asset confiscation, going well beyond the fines previously imposed under the original FBA.
  • Immediate 7-day action. Flag all current facilities where any Thai borrower, guarantor or security provider operates in an FBA-restricted sector and has a shareholder register that does not transparently disclose beneficial ownership.
  • 30-day action. Issue enhanced KYC requests to all flagged borrowers demanding certified beneficial-ownership declarations, source-of-funds evidence for Thai shareholders, and board-resolution confirmations.
  • 90-day action. Amend security documentation and facility agreements to include nominee-risk covenants, escrow triggers and express step-in powers (detailed in sections below).

Lender risk matrix, quick reference:

Risk level Borrower profile Immediate priority
High Borrower in FBA-restricted sector with Thai majority shareholders whose capital source is unverified Suspend new drawdowns; enhanced DD within 7 days
Medium Borrower in non-restricted sector but with cross-holdings involving property SPVs or land assets Enhanced KYC within 30 days; review security registration
Low Fully foreign-owned company holding valid Foreign Business Licence or operating in unrestricted sector Routine covenant check at next review date

What Changed in 2026: FBA, Company Law and Nominee Criminalisation

The 2026 amendments to the Foreign Business Act Thailand convert nominee arrangements from an administrative infringement into a criminal offence carrying custodial sentences.

Key Statutory Provisions

The core legislative changes relevant to nominee shareholder risks Thailand are drawn from the amended FBA as published in the Royal Thai Government Gazette and from parallel company-law reform proposals advanced by the Ministry of Commerce:

  • Criminal offence. Any person who acts as, or arranges for, a nominee shareholder to circumvent FBA foreign-ownership restrictions commits an offence punishable by imprisonment and a substantial fine. Both the foreign principal and the Thai nominee face liability.
  • Asset confiscation. Courts may order confiscation of shares, business assets and proceeds derived from the nominee arrangement. The Anti-Money Laundering Office (AMLO) has concurrent powers to freeze assets where nominee structures are linked to predicate offences under Thai AML law.
  • Administrative sanctions. The Department of Business Development (DBD) retains authority to revoke company registrations, and the Ministry of Commerce may suspend Foreign Business Licences upon evidence of nominee non-compliance.

Timeline of Legislative Steps and Enforcement Signals

Date / period Measure Practical effect
1999 (original FBA) Foreign Business Act B.E. 2542 enacted, Lists 1–3 restricted activities for foreign ownership Established 49% foreign-ownership ceiling in restricted sectors; administrative fines for non-compliance
2023–2025 Ministry of Commerce intensified nominee investigations; DBD audits increased Signal of enforcement appetite; several high-profile company suspensions reported via Ministry press releases
2026 (enacted) FBA amendment criminalises nominee arrangements; introduces custodial penalties and asset-confiscation powers Transforms compliance risk into criminal and counterparty risk for lenders and investors

How Nominee Arrangements Work in Thailand, Legal Background and Common Structures

A nominee shareholder Thailand arrangement typically involves Thai nationals or Thai-registered entities holding shares on behalf of a foreign beneficial owner to circumvent the FBA’s foreign-ownership limits.

The practice has historically been widespread in property development, hospitality, retail and services, all sectors where foreign ownership Thailand is restricted under FBA Lists 2 and 3. Common structures include preference-share arrangements that give the foreign party economic control while Thai nominees hold ordinary shares carrying voting rights, side agreements granting irrevocable powers of attorney to the foreign party, and layered holding companies designed to obscure beneficial ownership.

Typical Indicators and How Nominees Are Structured in Practice

Structure How it appears in public records Why it conceals beneficial ownership
Preference-share stacking Thai nationals hold majority ordinary shares; foreign party holds preference shares with enhanced economic rights DBD register shows Thai majority control; economic benefit flows to the foreign party via dividends and side agreements
Layered holding companies Multiple Thai-registered entities each hold minority foreign stakes; combined foreign economic interest exceeds 49% No single entity breaches the threshold on the register; cross-ownership is opaque without full group-structure mapping
Irrevocable power of attorney Thai shareholders grant POA to the foreign party, often not publicly registered Legal ownership remains Thai on paper; de facto control vests in the foreign party through undisclosed private agreements

Industry observers expect the 2026 reforms to make these structures significantly harder to maintain, as the DBD is understood to be enhancing its cross-referencing capabilities between company registers, land-title records and tax filings.

Lender Due Diligence Checklist for Nominee Shareholder Risks Thailand

Effective lender due diligence Thailand now requires verification that goes well beyond standard KYC, credit teams must proactively identify nominee risk in the borrower’s corporate structure before disbursement.

Red Flags: The Top 12 Indicators

  1. Thai shareholders who cannot demonstrate an independent source of funds for their equity contribution.
  2. Preference-share structures that allocate disproportionate economic rights to the foreign minority shareholder.
  3. Irrevocable powers of attorney from Thai shareholders to the foreign party or its affiliates.
  4. Side agreements, option deeds or call-option arrangements not disclosed in the company’s statutory filings.
  5. Thai shareholders who are employees, relatives or associates of the foreign beneficial owner.
  6. Identical registered addresses across multiple Thai entities in the borrower group.
  7. Share capital paid up at par minimum (negligible genuine investment by Thai shareholders).
  8. Board composition entirely controlled by foreign-appointed directors despite Thai majority shareholding.
  9. Management agreements that give the foreign party effective operational control without corresponding equity.
  10. Frequent share transfers among Thai individuals with no commercial rationale.
  11. Borrower operating in an FBA-restricted sector without a Foreign Business Licence.
  12. Land or property assets registered in the name of a Thai entity whose sole purpose is to hold that asset.

Enhanced Background Checks, Sources to Verify

  • DBD online company search. Verify shareholder names, shareholding percentages, paid-up capital and director appointments via the Department of Business Development’s publicly accessible database.
  • Land Department records. Cross-reference property-holding entities against the Land Department’s title-deed register to confirm ownership chains.
  • AMLO watchlists. Screen all shareholders and directors against the Anti-Money Laundering Office’s published lists of designated persons and entities.
  • Bank of Thailand compliance circulars. Confirm the borrower’s compliance with any BOT-issued KYC and AML guidance applicable to the sector.
  • Tax filing cross-checks. Request certified copies of recent corporate income-tax filings to verify declared revenue matches the business’s actual operations and scale.

Sample covenant clauses for facility agreements:

  • Nominee-disclosure covenant: The borrower shall represent and warrant that no shares in the borrower or any subsidiary are held by any person acting as a nominee, agent or trustee for any foreign person in contravention of the FBA.
  • Mandatory prepayment trigger: It shall be an event of default requiring immediate mandatory prepayment if any governmental authority commences an investigation or proceeding alleging that the borrower’s shareholding structure involves nominee arrangements.
  • Ongoing reporting obligation: The borrower shall deliver to the lender, within 10 business days of each anniversary, a certified beneficial-ownership declaration identifying all persons with a direct or indirect interest exceeding 10% of issued share capital.

Structuring Enforcement-Ready Security in a Nominee-Risk Environment

The enforcement of security Thailand lenders rely upon must now be structured to survive a scenario in which the borrower’s corporate structure is challenged, shares are confiscated, or assets are frozen by AMLO or the courts.

The primary legislative framework for taking non-possessory security over business assets is the Business Security Act B.E. 2558 (2015), published in the Royal Gazette, which permits charges over receivables, inventory, intellectual property and other movable assets. For real property, the Civil and Commercial Code governs mortgages registered at the Land Department. For shares, a pledge must be documented and the share certificates delivered or a transfer restriction annotated on the register.

Drafting Checklist and Essential Clauses

  • Fixed charge over land and buildings. Register a mortgage at the Land Department; ensure the mortgage deed expressly covers all structures, fixtures and improvements.
  • Floating charge over receivables and inventory. Register under the Business Security Act at the DBD; specify a crystallisation trigger tied to nominee-investigation events.
  • Share pledge with blank transfer forms. Obtain physical share certificates and executed-but-undated share-transfer forms; appoint a third-party custodian.
  • Escrow and cash-trap accounts. Require borrower cash flows to pass through a blocked account at a Thai commercial bank under a tri-party control agreement.
  • Express receiver-appointment power. Include contractual authority for the lender to appoint a receiver upon an event of default without prior court order, to the extent permitted by Thai law.
  • Cross-border guarantee and security. Where the borrower group has offshore assets, obtain parallel guarantees from the parent entity and take security under the governing law of the asset jurisdiction.

Reporting and Registration Obligations by Entity Type

Entity type Required public/registry filings Enforcement and lender impact
Thai private limited company (1+ Thai shareholders) Company registration at DBD; share register; potential beneficial-ownership records Charges over shares must be documented and share certificates held; nominee risk arises if beneficial ownership differs from the register; enforceability may be disrupted by criminal probes
Foreign-owned company (FBA-restricted sector) Foreign Business Licence; FBA notifications; Ministry of Commerce filings If found non-compliant, business may be suspended and assets subjected to administrative action, lenders face seizure risk on all collateral
Property-holding SPV Land-title registration at the Land Department Land charges and mortgages must be registered; land held by nominees may be subject to forensic title claims and confiscation orders

Enforcement Playbook, Civil Courts, Administrative Remedies and Criminal Procedures

Enforcement of security Thailand practitioners structure must account for three parallel tracks: civil-court proceedings, administrative action by regulators, and criminal prosecution under the amended FBA.

How to Seek Immediate Injunctive Relief in Thailand

  1. File an application for provisional measures (temporary restraining order) with the Thai Civil Court having jurisdiction over the borrower’s registered office or the location of the secured assets.
  2. Submit evidence demonstrating urgent risk of dissipation, including any government investigation notice, AMLO freeze order or public announcement of a nominee probe.
  3. Request an order prohibiting the borrower from disposing of, encumbering or transferring the secured assets pending determination of the substantive claim.
  4. Serve the order on the Land Department, relevant banks and the DBD to ensure third parties are on notice of the restraint.

Administrative Engagement with Ministry of Commerce, AMLO and Courts

Lenders should proactively engage with the Ministry of Commerce and AMLO where nominee arrangements are suspected in a borrower’s structure. Early coordination with the DBD, by requesting formal confirmation of the borrower’s registration status and flagging the lender’s registered security interest, can help preserve priority. Where AMLO has issued an asset-freeze order, lenders should file a claim as a secured creditor to protect their ranking.

Working with Thai Prosecutors, Protecting Lender Security

When criminal prosecution of a borrower for nominee offences is underway, the likely practical effect will be that the borrower’s assets become subject to restraint orders. Lenders must act immediately to register their security interest with the prosecuting authority and submit evidence of the bona fide nature of the lending arrangement. Failure to intervene early may result in the lender’s collateral being treated as proceeds of the nominee offence and subject to confiscation.

Remedy Decision Matrix

Trigger event Best immediate remedy Typical time to result Key evidence required
Borrower notified of DBD nominee investigation Civil injunction + formal notice to DBD of registered security 7–21 days (injunction); ongoing (administrative) Security registration certificate; facility agreement; KYC records
AMLO asset-freeze order issued File secured-creditor claim with AMLO; apply to court for carve-out of secured assets 30–90 days Registered charge documents; evidence of arms-length lending; valuation
Borrower arrested for nominee offences Appoint receiver (if contractual power exists); file claim in criminal confiscation proceedings 90–180 days Receiver-appointment clause; share certificates; escrow-account records
Foreign-Business Licence revoked Accelerate facility; enforce security before administrative wind-down 14–60 days Event-of-default notice; mortgage deed; Business Security Act registration

Cross-Border Issues: Recognition, Asset Tracing and Parallel Proceedings

For institutions engaged in cross-border financing Thailand transactions, enforcement rarely stays within a single jurisdiction. Where a borrower’s group structure spans Thailand and offshore centres, lenders must coordinate parallel proceedings to maximise recovery.

Enforcing Security Where Primary Assets Are Offshore

  • Identify the asset jurisdiction early. Map all group entities and assets during the initial due diligence phase; record the governing law of each security document.
  • Obtain parallel injunctions. Where assets are located in jurisdictions with developed interim-relief mechanisms (Singapore, Hong Kong, England), apply for freezing orders contemporaneously with Thai proceedings.
  • Engage local correspondent counsel. Appoint qualified counsel in each asset jurisdiction before enforcement is needed; establish communication protocols and shared evidence repositories.
  • Consider treaty-based recognition. Thailand is not party to the Hague Judgments Convention, so Thai court judgments must generally be enforced by commencing fresh proceedings in the asset jurisdiction. Factor this timeline into recovery planning.

Cooperation with Correspondents and Local Courts

Early indications suggest that Thai authorities are increasingly willing to cooperate with foreign regulators and judicial authorities on nominee-related investigations, particularly where AML concerns are present. Lenders should ensure their local counsel in Thailand is authorised to communicate with AMLO and the Office of the Attorney-General, and that evidence packages are prepared in formats acceptable to both Thai and foreign courts. Maintaining a centralised evidence log, covering KYC records, security documents and all correspondence with the borrower, is essential for multi-jurisdictional enforcement.

Practical Templates and Drafting Points

The following drafting prompts address the most critical nominee shareholder risks Thailand lenders face. These are not substitute legal advice but serve as starting points for counsel drafting security and facility documents.

  • Enhanced beneficial-ownership covenant. “The Borrower represents, warrants and undertakes that, at the date of this Agreement and at all times thereafter, no person holds or will hold any share in the Borrower or any Subsidiary as nominee, agent or trustee for any other person for the purpose of circumventing the Foreign Business Act B.E. 2542 (as amended).”
  • Nominee-disclosure covenant. “The Borrower shall promptly notify the Lender in writing upon becoming aware of any allegation, investigation or proceeding by any governmental authority relating to the use of nominee shareholders in the Borrower or any member of the Borrower Group.”
  • Escrow and cash-trap trigger. “Upon the occurrence of a Nominee Investigation Event, all amounts standing to the credit of the Collection Account shall be swept to the Blocked Account and held subject to the Lender’s instructions until the Nominee Investigation Event has been resolved to the Lender’s satisfaction.”

If you can only add three clauses, add these: (1) a nominee-disclosure warranty that survives completion; (2) a mandatory-prepayment trigger linked to any nominee investigation; and (3) an escrow sweep mechanism activated by regulatory action.

Risk Scenarios, Four Worked Examples

  • Scenario 1: Borrower uses Thai nominees for shareholding. A Thai limited company borrower in the hospitality sector has three Thai shareholders who are employees of the foreign investor. The lender discovers the arrangement during enhanced KYC. Immediate steps: suspend further drawdowns (7 days); demand certified BO declaration and source-of-funds evidence (30 days); if unresolved, accelerate the facility and enforce the share pledge (90 days).
  • Scenario 2: Foreign borrower in FBA-restricted sector. A foreign-controlled entity operates a retail business without a Foreign Business Licence, relying on Thai nominees. The DBD commences an investigation. Immediate steps: notify the DBD of the lender’s registered security (7 days); apply for injunctive relief to prevent asset dissipation (30 days); file a secured-creditor claim if the licence is revoked (90 days).
  • Scenario 3: Cross-border SPV with offshore assets. A borrower group holds Thai real estate through a local SPV and cash in a Singapore bank account. Immediate steps: instruct Singapore counsel to apply for a freezing order (7 days); register a caveat at the Thai Land Department (30 days); coordinate Thai and Singapore enforcement proceedings (90 days).
  • Scenario 4: Borrower arrested, assets frozen. AMLO issues a freeze order covering the borrower’s bank accounts and property. Immediate steps: file secured-creditor claim with AMLO and the court (7 days); submit evidence of bona fide lending and registered security (30 days); apply for court carve-out of secured assets from the confiscation proceedings (90 days).

Key Takeaways and Immediate Checklist for Nominee Shareholder Risks Thailand

Credit committees, compliance officers and in-house counsel with Thai lending exposure should action the following without delay:

  1. Screen the entire Thai portfolio for FBA-restricted-sector borrowers with unverified Thai shareholders.
  2. Issue enhanced KYC requests demanding certified beneficial-ownership declarations and source-of-funds documentation from all flagged borrowers.
  3. Amend facility agreements to include nominee-disclosure warranties, mandatory-prepayment triggers and escrow sweep clauses.
  4. Review and, where necessary, re-register all security interests, confirm that mortgages are current at the Land Department and Business Security Act charges are recorded at the DBD.
  5. Establish a standing instruction with Thai counsel to monitor Royal Gazette publications and Ministry of Commerce guidance for further nominee-related regulatory changes.
  6. Prepare a pre-packaged enforcement file, including all security documents, KYC records, share certificates and escrow agreements, ready for immediate deployment if a nominee investigation is announced.
  7. Brief the board and risk committee on the 2026 FBA amendments and their potential impact on Thai-linked exposures, collateral values and provisioning. For a tailored lender-risk review, consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory for Thailand Commercial practitioners.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Herbert Kuess at Sukhothai Inter Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Royal Thai Government Gazette, Foreign Business Act and Business Security Act (texts and amendments)
  2. Ministry of Commerce (Thailand), guidance and press releases on nominee investigations
  3. Department of Business Development (DBD), Ministry of Commerce
  4. Anti-Money Laundering Office (AMLO), Thailand
  5. Bank of Thailand (BOT)
  6. Office of the Attorney-General, Thailand

FAQs

Can foreigners own 100% of a company in Thailand after the 2026 FBA changes?
Foreign ownership Thailand remains restricted under FBA Lists 1–3. Foreigners can own 100% of a company only if the business activity falls outside the restricted lists or the company holds a valid Foreign Business Licence. The 2026 amendments do not expand the list of permitted sectors, they strengthen penalties for circumventing existing restrictions through nominee arrangements.
Under the 2026 FBA amendments, both the foreign principal and the Thai nominee face imprisonment and fines. Courts may order asset confiscation Thailand proceedings covering shares, business assets and proceeds linked to the nominee structure. AMLO has concurrent powers to freeze assets where the arrangement constitutes a predicate offence under Thai AML legislation.
Lenders should verify beneficial ownership beyond the DBD share register, require certified source-of-funds evidence from all Thai shareholders, cross-reference Land Department and tax records, and screen shareholders against AMLO watchlists. All findings should be documented in a structured DD report that can be produced in enforcement proceedings.
Effective structures include registered mortgages over land, share pledges with physical delivery of certificates, Business Security Act charges over receivables and inventory, escrow accounts with tri-party control agreements, and cross-border guarantees from the parent entity. Registration of every security interest at the relevant Thai registry is essential to establish priority and defend against confiscation claims.
The lender should immediately file a secured-creditor claim with AMLO and the supervising court, submitting evidence of the bona fide lending relationship and the registered security interest. The lender may also apply to the court for a carve-out order, seeking to exclude the secured assets from the scope of the confiscation proceedings.
Thailand is not party to the Hague Judgments Convention, so Thai court orders are not automatically enforceable abroad. Lenders must commence fresh proceedings in the asset jurisdiction, supported by certified copies of the Thai judgment and evidence that the Thai court had proper jurisdiction. Parallel protective measures in Thailand and the foreign jurisdiction should be pursued simultaneously to prevent asset flight.
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Thailand 2026 Nominee Crackdown, What Lenders and Foreign Investors Must Do to Protect Financing and Enforce Security

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