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How to Structure Cross‑border Joint Ventures with Chinese (and Other Overseas) Partners in Australia, FIRB, ACCC & Drafting Steps (2026)

posted 3 hours ago

Last updated: 7 July 2026

Cross-border joint ventures in Australia now face a fundamentally different regulatory landscape. Since 1 January 2026, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has operated a mandatory, suspensory merger‑control regime that requires parties to notify qualifying transactions, including many joint venture formations, and wait for clearance before completing them. At the same time, the Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB) continues to screen foreign investments that meet prescribed monetary thresholds or involve sensitive sectors, with heightened scrutiny applied to government‑related investors such as state‑owned enterprises.

For Chinese investors in Australia and other overseas partners considering a JV on Australian soil, the interaction between these two gatekeepers creates a compliance corridor that demands careful structuring, sequencing and drafting from the earliest stages of negotiation.

Key Takeaways

  • ACCC mandatory notification, The 2026 regime means that JV formations involving share or asset acquisitions that meet the prescribed thresholds must be notified to the ACCC, and the transaction cannot complete until clearance is granted or the statutory waiting period expires.
  • FIRB screening thresholds, Foreign persons acquiring interests of 20 per cent or more (or 10 per cent for sensitive sectors and government‑related investors) in an Australian entity, or acquiring Australian land, must obtain FIRB approval. The FIRB online application now asks whether the transaction will also be notified to the ACCC.
  • Drafting is the frontline, Suspensory covenants, regulatory‑failure termination rights, deadlock ladders and IP‑security clauses must be built into JV documentation from term‑sheet stage to manage the risk of delay, rejection or remedies.

ACCC Mandatory Merger Notification and Suspensory Regime: When Do Cross‑Border Joint Ventures in Australia Trigger It?

Any JV formation that involves a notifiable acquisition of shares or assets and meets the prescribed thresholds must be notified to the ACCC before completion. The 2026 mandatory regime replaced the former voluntary, informal clearance process with a statutory framework under the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth). Industry observers expect this change to add both time and cost to cross‑border deals, but it also provides greater certainty: once clearance is granted, the parties can proceed without the residual risk of post‑completion challenge that existed under the old system.

Overview of the 2026 Rules

Under the mandatory regime, a transaction that meets the notification thresholds set out in the ACCC’s guidelines must be filed with the ACCC before the parties can complete the acquisition. The regime is suspensory: completion is prohibited until the ACCC either clears the transaction, accepts enforceable undertakings, or the statutory waiting period expires without objection. Filing is made through the ACCC’s merger notification portal, and the ACCC has published detailed guidance on what constitutes a notifiable transaction, the information required and the applicable timeframes.

How JVs Commonly Trigger the Regime

Not every JV will require ACCC notification, but many cross‑border structures will. The critical question is whether the JV formation involves an “acquisition” within the meaning of the Act, that is, a transfer of shares, assets or voting rights that confers a degree of control or influence over the target business. The following scenarios commonly trigger notification obligations:

  • 50:50 equity JV. Where both parties contribute assets or operations to a newly incorporated entity and each acquires 50 per cent of its shares, the formation involves an acquisition of shares and, if the thresholds are met, a mandatory ACCC notification.
  • Controlling‑interest acquisition. Where the foreign partner acquires a majority stake or decisive influence (through board representation, veto rights or reserved matters) in the JV entity, this represents an acquisition of control that is likely caught by the regime.
  • Asset contribution. Where one party contributes a business division, distribution network or significant physical assets to the JV entity, the transfer of those assets may itself constitute a notifiable acquisition if the value or competitive significance meets the thresholds.

Practical Examples

Example 1, 50:50 dealer JV. An Australian automotive parts distributor and a Chinese component manufacturer propose to form a 50:50 incorporated JV to distribute automotive parts nationally. Both parties contribute existing customer contracts, warehousing assets and staff. Because the JV entity acquires substantial assets from both parties and both parties acquire shares in the new entity, the formation is likely notifiable under the mandatory regime if the combined turnover and asset thresholds are met.

Example 2, Contractual collaboration. A Chinese technology firm and an Australian university agree to co‑develop a software platform. No new entity is formed; IP is jointly owned under a collaboration agreement. Because no shares or assets are acquired, this arrangement is unlikely to trigger ACCC mandatory notification, though it may still attract FIRB scrutiny if it involves sensitive technology.

Entity / Transaction Type Typical ACCC Reporting Trigger Risk Typical FIRB Screening Trigger
Incorporated JV company (new entity, equity contributions) High, if one partner gains decisive influence or substantive asset transfer; may trigger mandatory notification under 2026 regime High, if foreign person acquires 20%+ in Australian business or assets; land or critical sectors flagged
Contractual JV (unincorporated co‑operation) Lower risk if no transfer of control or shares, but may still be caught if arrangements confer decisive influence Lower FIRB risk if no acquisition of securities or land; still watch “beneficial ownership” tests
Asset JV (asset transfer to JV entity) High, if substantial asset acquisition affects market structure Triggers FIRB if foreign person acquires substantial Australian land or sensitive assets
Minority strategic alliance / supply agreement Low risk normally, unless coordination restricts competition (concerted practice) Low FIRB risk unless investments involve shares/land or exceed thresholds

FIRB and Foreign Investment: Screening, Thresholds and Specific Issues for Chinese Investors in Australia

Any foreign person proposing to acquire a substantial interest in an Australian entity or Australian land must apply for FIRB approval unless an exemption applies. The Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975 (Cth) and the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Fees Imposition Act 2015 (Cth) establish the framework, and the FIRB administers the screening process on behalf of the Treasurer.

FIRB Thresholds and Tests

The key thresholds that apply to cross‑border joint ventures in Australia are:

  • 20 per cent interest. A foreign person (or group of associated foreign persons) acquiring a direct interest of 20 per cent or more in an Australian entity generally requires FIRB approval, subject to monetary thresholds that vary depending on whether the investor’s home country has a free‑trade agreement with Australia.
  • 10 per cent interest, sensitive sectors. For investments in sensitive sectors (including media, telecommunications, transport, defence and critical infrastructure), the threshold drops to 10 per cent, and additional national‑interest tests apply.
  • Government‑related investors. Foreign government investors, including state‑owned enterprises, sovereign wealth funds and entities in which a foreign government holds a substantial interest, face a zero‑dollar threshold, meaning all proposed investments require FIRB approval regardless of value.
  • Australian land. Acquisitions of interests in Australian land (including commercial, agricultural and residential land) are subject to separate screening thresholds and conditions.

Chinese Investor Practical Flags

Chinese investors in Australia face particular practical considerations when seeking FIRB approval for JV transactions. Early indications from recent FIRB practice suggest that the following factors attract closer scrutiny:

  • State‑owned enterprise (SOE) status. If the Chinese JV partner is an SOE, a subsidiary of an SOE, or a private entity with material state links (including party‑committee governance structures or state‑backed financing), the zero‑dollar threshold applies, and the Treasurer’s national‑interest assessment will weigh the level of foreign government influence.
  • Critical infrastructure and technology. Investments touching critical infrastructure (energy, ports, water, telecommunications) or sensitive technology (AI, quantum computing, biotechnology) face enhanced scrutiny, and the FIRB may impose conditions on data access, operational control and board composition.
  • IP and data flows. JV structures that contemplate the transfer of Australian‑developed IP to the foreign partner, or the routing of data through overseas servers, will attract close FIRB and national‑security review.

Exemptions and Common Errors

Certain transactions are exempt from FIRB notification, including acquisitions below the applicable monetary threshold by investors from FTA partner countries, passive portfolio investments below specified levels, and some intra‑group restructures. However, common errors arise when parties assume an exemption applies without verifying the investor’s beneficial‑ownership chain. A JV partner that appears to be a private Hong Kong entity may, on closer examination, be controlled by a mainland Chinese SOE, converting the transaction from an exempt to a notifiable one.

The FIRB online application portal now includes a specific question asking whether the transaction will also be notified to the ACCC under the mandatory merger‑control regime. This reflects the increasing coordination between the two bodies: FIRB may seek input from the ACCC on competition aspects of a foreign investment application, and the ACCC may consider foreign‑investment conditions imposed by FIRB when assessing merger clearance.

Structuring Options and Decision Tree to Reduce Regulatory Risk for Cross‑Border Joint Ventures in Australia

The choice of JV structure directly affects whether, and how aggressively, ACCC and FIRB review processes are triggered. Practitioners advising on cross‑border JV structuring should map each proposed structure against both regulatory regimes before committing to a term sheet. The four principal options, and their regulatory risk profiles, are set out below.

When a Contractual JV Is Preferable

An unincorporated, contractual JV, where the parties collaborate under a co‑operation agreement without forming a new entity or transferring shares, typically carries the lowest regulatory trigger risk. No shares are acquired; no assets need change hands. This structure suits technology collaborations, co‑marketing arrangements and staged market‑entry projects where the overseas partner wants to test the Australian market before committing capital. The trade‑off is limited asset protection: each party retains its own assets and liabilities, and there is no ring‑fenced entity to limit exposure.

When an Incorporated JV Is Necessary

An incorporated JV company is necessary when the parties need a distinct legal entity to hold assets, employ staff, enter contracts or obtain licences in Australia. This structure provides clear separation of the JV business from each partner’s other operations and allows for structured governance (board, shareholders’ agreement, constitution). However, the share subscription or asset contribution required to capitalise the entity will almost certainly trigger FIRB screening (if the foreign partner’s interest meets the threshold) and may trigger ACCC notification (if the asset or market‑share tests are met). For automotive joint ventures and other distribution‑network JVs where the entity must hold dealership licences, franchise agreements or real property, incorporation is typically unavoidable.

Protective Governance: Non‑Executive Vetoes, Reserved Matters and Limited Voting

Where the parties proceed with an incorporated JV, the governance architecture can be designed to calibrate the level of “control” and “influence” each partner exercises, which in turn affects the regulatory analysis. Practical techniques include:

  • Reserved matters. Limiting the foreign partner’s veto rights to genuinely protective matters (capital calls, related‑party transactions, winding up) rather than day‑to‑day operational decisions can reduce the argument that the foreign partner has “decisive influence” for ACCC purposes.
  • Independent directors. Appointing independent, non‑executive directors to the board can demonstrate that neither partner exercises sole control, which may be relevant to both ACCC and FIRB assessments.
  • Staged equity ramp. Structuring the foreign partner’s equity stake as a staged ramp, starting below the 20 per cent FIRB trigger and increasing subject to regulatory approvals at each stage, can allow the JV to commence operations while FIRB approval for the full stake is being processed.
Structure Typical FIRB Trigger Risk Typical ACCC Trigger Risk
Contractual JV (no entity, no share/asset transfer) Low Low
Incorporated JV (equity contributions, new entity) High Medium–High
Asset JV (asset transfer to JV entity) Medium–High High
Minority strategic alliance (<20% equity, no control) Low–Medium Low

JV Drafting Checklist and Sample Clauses: The Practical Bank

The JV agreement is where regulatory risk is either contained or compounded. For cross‑border joint ventures in Australia subject to ACCC and FIRB review, the drafting must address three layers of risk: pre‑completion regulatory process, post‑completion governance and control, and exit and transfer mechanics. The following JV drafting checklist sets out the essential clauses, with sample language that practitioners can adapt to specific transactions.

Filing and Suspensory Drafting

Under the 2026 suspensory notification regime, completion cannot occur until ACCC clearance is obtained. The JV agreement must therefore separate signing from completion and include a robust regulatory‑conditions framework.

  • Suspensory notification covenant. Obligates both parties to prepare and file the ACCC notification within a specified number of business days after signing, and to cooperate with all information requests.
  • Regulatory failure termination right. Gives either party the right to terminate the agreement if ACCC clearance is not obtained (or is obtained subject to unacceptable conditions) within a specified long‑stop period.
  • FIRB condition precedent. Makes completion conditional on the foreign partner obtaining FIRB approval (including any conditions imposed by the Treasurer), with a separate long‑stop date that may differ from the ACCC long‑stop.

Sample clause, Suspensory notification covenant:

“Each Party shall, within [10] Business Days of the date of this Agreement, prepare and lodge with the ACCC a notification of the Transaction in accordance with the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth). Neither Party shall take any step to complete the Transaction unless and until the ACCC has issued a clearance decision or the statutory waiting period has expired without objection.”

Sample clause, Regulatory failure completion clause:

“If ACCC Clearance and FIRB Approval have not been obtained by the Long‑Stop Date, either Party may terminate this Agreement by written notice to the other, whereupon neither Party shall have any further obligation to the other except under clauses [confidentiality] and [costs].”

Deadlock and Exit Sample Clauses

Deadlock resolution and exit mechanics are critical in any JV but take on added complexity in cross-border structures where cultural differences, different time zones and regulatory constraints all increase the risk of impasse.

  • Deadlock resolution ladder. A tiered process starting with senior‑executive negotiation, escalating to mediation (typically under the rules of the Australian Centre for International Commercial Arbitration) and, if unresolved, to binding arbitration or a buy/sell mechanism.
  • Tag‑along and drag‑along rights. Protect minority partners (typically the foreign investor) from being locked into a JV where the majority partner sells to a third party, while also allowing the majority to consolidate if the JV strategy diverges.
  • Transfer restrictions. Pre‑emptive rights, board‑approval requirements and restrictions on transfer to competitors, with a specific carve‑out acknowledging that any transfer to a foreign person may itself require FIRB approval.

Sample clause, Deadlock resolution ladder with arbitration fallback:

“If the Board is unable to resolve a Deadlock Matter within [20] Business Days, the matter shall be referred to the Chief Executive Officers of each Party for resolution. If the matter remains unresolved after a further [15] Business Days, either Party may refer the Deadlock Matter to binding arbitration in Melbourne under the ACICA Arbitration Rules, with the arbitral tribunal comprising a sole arbitrator agreed by the Parties or, failing agreement, appointed by ACICA.”

FIRB‑Related Warranties and Covenant Drafting

Where the foreign partner requires FIRB approval, the JV agreement should include specific warranties and covenants addressing the foreign‑investment framework:

  • Foreign‑person warranty. The foreign partner warrants its ownership structure, identifies any foreign‑government interests and confirms whether it is a “foreign government investor” for the purposes of the Act.
  • Compliance with FIRB conditions. Both parties covenant to comply with any conditions imposed by the Treasurer as part of the FIRB approval, and acknowledge that breach of those conditions may constitute a criminal offence.
  • IP and data restrictions. Where FIRB conditions restrict the transfer of IP or data offshore, the JV agreement should include operational covenants requiring that all covered data and IP remain on Australian servers and are accessible only to Australian‑based personnel, unless the Treasurer provides written consent.
  • Escrow for competition remedies. Where the ACCC clearance is conditional on divestiture or behavioural remedies, the JV agreement should provide for escrow of the relevant assets or funds pending completion of the remedy.

Sector Example, Automotive and Franchised Network Joint Ventures

Automotive joint ventures illustrate the practical intersection of ACCC and FIRB risk in cross‑border JV structuring. Dealer networks are distribution infrastructure; acquiring or controlling them affects market structure in ways that attract ACCC attention. Meanwhile, Chinese OEMs and component manufacturers increasingly seek Australian distribution JVs to access right‑hand‑drive markets, which brings FIRB screening into play.

Practical structuring considerations for this sector include:

  • Dealership management contracts. Rather than acquiring equity in an existing dealer group (which triggers both ACCC and FIRB review), the Chinese OEM enters a management contract or franchise‑style licence that gives it brand control and margin participation without a share acquisition. This reduces, though does not eliminate, FIRB trigger risk.
  • Franchise‑style carve‑outs. Where equity participation is commercially essential, structuring the JV so that the OEM’s stake remains below FIRB thresholds for the initial phase, with an option to increase subject to regulatory approval, allows the JV to commence operations while the regulatory process continues.
  • Distribution‑network ring‑fencing. Separating the dealership real property (held by the Australian partner in a separate entity) from the operating business (held in the JV) can reduce the FIRB land‑acquisition trigger while preserving the JV’s operational scope.

Negotiation talking points commonly used in automotive JV discussions include: (1) insisting on mutual pre‑notification engagement with the ACCC before filing, to identify potential objections early; (2) agreeing on a shared regulatory‑counsel protocol to avoid duplicative filings and inconsistent submissions; and (3) building a regulatory‑cost sharing mechanism into the JV agreement to allocate filing fees, advisory costs and any remedy‑implementation expenses proportionately.

Practical Timeline and Risk Matrix: What to Do, When

Step Action Responsible Party Estimated Days
1 Preliminary regulatory mapping: identify ACCC and FIRB triggers Both parties’ legal counsel (jointly) 5–10
2 Pre‑notification engagement with ACCC (recommended) Lead counsel 10–20
3 Prepare and lodge FIRB application Foreign partner’s counsel 10–15 (preparation)
4 FIRB statutory review period FIRB / Treasurer 30–90 (may be extended)
5 Sign JV agreement (conditional on regulatory approvals) Both parties ,
6 Prepare and lodge ACCC mandatory notification Both parties’ counsel (jointly) 10 (after signing)
7 ACCC statutory waiting and review period ACCC Statutory period (check ACCC guidance for current timeframes)
8 Completion (if both ACCC clearance and FIRB approval obtained) Both parties ,
9 Escalation / alternative: if clearance not obtained, trigger long‑stop termination or negotiate remedies Both parties Per agreement

Risk matrix, typical JV fact patterns:

Fact Pattern ACCC Risk FIRB Risk Overall Complexity
50:50 incorporated JV, both parties contribute assets, competitive overlap High High High
Minority equity stake (<20%), no operational control, non‑sensitive sector Low Low Low
Contractual collaboration, no entity, no IP transfer Low Low Low
Incorporated JV with SOE partner, critical‑infrastructure sector Medium–High High High
Asset JV involving Australian land transfer Medium High Medium–High

Conclusion

Structuring cross-border joint ventures in Australia in 2026 requires a deliberate, two‑track approach to regulatory compliance. The ACCC mandatory, suspensory notification regime and the FIRB screening framework operate in parallel, and the choice of JV structure, governance model and drafting architecture directly affects whether, and how, each regime is triggered. For Chinese investors in Australia and other overseas partners, the practical steps are clear: map the regulatory triggers early, choose the lowest‑risk structure that still achieves the commercial objectives, sequence FIRB and ACCC filings deliberately, and build suspensory covenants, regulatory‑failure termination rights and deadlock resolution mechanisms into the JV documentation from term‑sheet stage.

This article provides general guidance on structuring cross‑border joint ventures in Australia and does not constitute legal advice. Regulatory thresholds, exemptions and timeframes may change. Readers should seek tailored professional advice before entering into any JV transaction.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Louis Shivarev at TNS Lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Australian Competition & Consumer Commission (ACCC), Mergers and Acquisitions
  2. Foreign Investment Review Board, Merger Control Regime Interaction Guidance
  3. Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB), General Guidance
  4. Australian Government Treasury
  5. Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), Federal Register of Legislation
  6. Business.gov.au, Joint Venture Guidance

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