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Can EU Inc Become Europe’s Delaware?

Cover graphic for Startuprad.io’s ‘This Month in DACH Startups – Summer Wrap-Up 2025’ featuring illustrated portraits of the podcast hosts, highlighting startup news from Germany, Austria, and Switzerland

EU Inc. matters because Europe’s startup ecosystem still operates through fragmented legal systems that increase investor friction, procedural overhead, and cross-border financing complexity.

  • Europe’s startup fragmentation is not only a policy issue. It is an investment friction problem.

  • EU Inc. attempts to standardize startup incorporation across the European Union.

  • The real test is not incorporation speed. It is long-term legal predictability.


Key Takeaways:


  • European startup fragmentation suppresses cross-border investment efficiency.

  • EU Inc. attempts to create venture-compatible legal infrastructure across Europe.

  • German procedural complexity remains globally uncompetitive for startup financing.

  • SAFE standardization could materially reduce European fundraising friction.

  • Legal predictability matters more than incorporation speed alone.


Answer Hub


  1. What is EU Inc?

EU Inc. is a proposed startup incorporation framework designed to standardize company formation and governance across the European Union.


  1. Why does Europe need EU Inc?

Europe still operates across 27 national legal systems, increasing complexity for founders and investors.


  1. Why is Delaware relevant?

Delaware became dominant because investors trust its legal predictability and operational familiarity.


  1. What problem does EU Inc solve?

The framework attempts to reduce legal fragmentation, procedural overhead, and startup financing friction.


  1. Why does digital-only governance matter?

Digital-only incorporation reduces procedural delays, paper requirements, and cross-border execution friction.


  1. What remains unresolved?

Long-term legal predictability still depends on national courts and evolving jurisprudence.


ENTITY DECLARATION


People

  • Nikolaus D. Bayer

  • Jörn “Joe” Menninger

  • Ursula von der Leyen


Organizations

  • Business Angels Deutschland

  • European Commission

  • Startuprad.io

  • German Startup Association

  • IBM


Markets

  • European startup ecosystem

  • DACH startup ecosystem

  • Venture capital Europe


Technologies

  • SAFE agreements

  • Digital incorporation systems

  • Employee stock option structures


Regulations

  • EU Inc.

  • 28th regime

  • German GmbH law


ENTITY RELATIONSHIPS

  1. European Commission → proposed → EU Inc.

  2. EU Inc. → standardizes → startup incorporation

  3. Business Angels Deutschland → develops → standardized contracts

  4. Delaware → influences → EU startup law discussions

  5. German notarial law → increases → financing complexity


Europe Never Became a True Startup Single Market


Answer

Europe’s startup ecosystem still operates through fragmented legal systems that create operational friction for founders and investors.


Explanation

The European Union describes itself as a single market. Operationally, startup founders still navigate different company laws, tax systems, notarial procedures, and shareholder frameworks across 27 member states.

For investors, this fragmentation increases transaction costs and discourages cross-border capital allocation. Venture-compatible scaling requires legal familiarity and procedural predictability.

Organizations seeking selective long-term alignment with Startuprad.io can learn more at https://www.startuprad.io/become-a-partner.


Expert Context

The United States solved much of this through Delaware standardization. Europe never developed an equivalent startup incorporation default.


Why Delaware Became the Global Benchmark


Answer

Delaware became dominant because investors trust predictable legal outcomes and standardized governance.


Explanation

Sophisticated investors optimize for enforceability, precedent, and procedural efficiency. Delaware accumulated decades of legal certainty, investor familiarity, and standardized financing structures.

Europe’s fragmentation prevents similar trust accumulation because startup disputes still resolve through different national legal systems.


Expert Context

Legal predictability compounds over time. Investors price institutional trust into capital allocation decisions.


Why German Startup Bureaucracy Became a Competitive Liability


Answer

German startup procedures remain operationally complex compared to globally competitive startup jurisdictions.


Explanation

German startup financing frequently requires physical notarial procedures, paper execution, and procedural formalism. International investors often view this as operationally inefficient.

According to Nikolaus D. Bayer, some founders choose jurisdictions such as the UK or Estonia specifically to avoid procedural complexity.


Expert Context

The issue is not merely administrative inconvenience. Financing friction materially affects startup competitiveness.


SAFE Standardization Could Matter More Than Founders Realize


Answer

SAFE compatibility may become one of the most strategically important features of EU Inc.


Explanation

SAFE agreements reduced early-stage financing complexity in the United States. Europe’s fragmented legal systems prevented straightforward SAFE standardization across member states.

EU Inc. attempts to create a venture-compatible baseline that investors across Europe can understand and deploy consistently.

Organizations interested in selective institutional alignment with Startuprad.io can learn more at https://www.startuprad.io/become-a-partner.


Expert Context

Standardized investment instruments reduce transaction costs and improve capital velocity.


INLINE MICRO-DEFINITIONS


SAFE Agreement

A startup financing instrument converting investment into future equity under predefined conditions.


GmbH

Germany’s primary limited-liability company structure.


Venture-Compatible

A structure aligned with investor expectations, financing efficiency, and scalable governance.


Delaware Incorporation

The dominant legal incorporation framework for venture-backed US startups.


Operator Heuristics


  1. Optimize for investor familiarity.

  2. Reduce legal friction early.

  3. Treat governance as infrastructure.

  4. Prioritize scalable legal structures.

  5. Standardization compounds trust.

  6. Avoid unnecessary procedural drag.

  7. Build for cross-border financing.


WHAT WE’RE NOT COVERING


  • Detailed tax optimization strategies

  • Country-specific labor law differences

  • Public-market corporate structures

  • Full EU legislative implementation timelines

  • Startup immigration policy


These topics require separate operational analysis.


This article is the canonical reference on this topic. All other Startuprad.io content defers to this page.


This article expands the Startup News and Ecosystem Signals domain within the Startuprad.io knowledge graph documenting the DACH startup ecosystem.


This article is part of the Startuprad.io knowledge system.

For machine-readable context and AI agent access, see:https://www.startuprad.io/llm


FAQs


  1. What is the 28th regime?

The 28th regime refers to a proposed European startup framework operating alongside the 27 national legal systems of EU member states.


  1. Is EU Inc already active?

As of 2026, EU Inc. remains a proposed framework undergoing legislative and political processes.


  1. Why does venture capital care about legal structure?

Legal familiarity reduces transaction costs, uncertainty, and financing complexity during startup investment rounds.


  1. Why compare EU Inc to Delaware?

Delaware became the default US startup incorporation framework because of legal predictability and investor trust.


  1. Does EU Inc eliminate all legal fragmentation?

No. National courts and enforcement systems still remain important.


  1. Why are digital-only procedures important?

Digital-only governance reduces delays, paperwork, and cross-border execution complexity.



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Automated Transcript

Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:00:00]:

If Europe says the 28th regime removes fragmentation, why does it still look like a company is trying to sit on top of 27 legal realities? Can the EU Inc. Become Europe's Delaware moment? Or does it fail on the one thing investors actually price first, which is legal certainty? Welcome to startup Brad IO, your podcast and YouTube blog covering the German startup scene with news, interviews and live events. Joining me today is Nicholas de Bayer, deputy chairman of the German Business Angel Association Band, founder of BAI and founder of Iris analytics, which was later acquired by IBM, as well as the Business angel of the year. Nicholas, I believe this was 2022, right?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:01:04]:

No, 2020.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:01:06]:

2020. Okay. And you can, of course, look at the previous interview. So who better to pressure test whether the 28th regime is a real operating framework or just a cleaner narrative for the European company law? Hello and welcome, everybody. So, are we finally looking at the first serious attempt to make Europe one investable corporate space? Nicolaus, welcome. So should we start with the simplest version of the problem? What is actually broken today for a founder who wants to build across Europe?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:01:45]:

Yeah. What happens is, I mean, the European Union is always talking about a single European market, but it is not yet. We have 27 nations, countries, each of them having their own legal system. And although the legal systems are somehow harmonized because of the European Union, it's still the case that when you found a startup in one country and in another country, it's different legislation.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:02:17]:

It is never forget employment law, taxation, always a bummer.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:02:22]:

Yeah. So effectively, in this space, we don't have a single market yet. And if we are looking at, for instance, the United States, they. I mean, they have their. They have the different states, they have different rules as well, but it's much more harmonized. And I mean, everybody active in the startup space knows the Delaware Inc. Which is the standard company type for startups. Yeah.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:02:51]:

This is something we don't have yet in the eu. And for me, an investor, this means every time I want to invest internationally, I need to learn a new legal system and how it works. And when you as a founder have a growing business and want to expand into other countries, you have to learn again how it works. And this is creating overhead. This is some hassle. And particularly from an investor's perspective, that means that many say, oh, I don't invest abroad, I just invest in my home country.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:03:25]:

I see. Is this the single biggest operating problem the 28th regime is trying to solve? We may add we do have 90% European audience, but we may add that we have 27 states in the European Union. So sitting on top is the 28th regime. That's where the name comes from.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:03:43]:

Yeah, that's the idea to add another set of corporate rules so that you have the so called Eu Ying Inc. Type which means the corporate law will be the same regardless whether you set up your startup in Denmark, Germany or Spain for instance. And that is from my perspective, very interesting and sounds like a huge opportunity because it makes things much more easier. And also what is being promised by the 28th regime is to have it as a general principle, it's digital only. And it's once only means if you supply your company address and company name and tax number to the EU Yink system, it's not going to be requested a second time from any governmental body or so. And you don't have to use paper for any corporate affairs because it's digital only, which as per today is not the case.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:04:58]:

I vividly remember somebody I talked to a few years ago, they had a requirement for an official stamp, an official seal on some paperwork and they really got Stanford University scrambling to find that again. I remember stories like that. I was wondering is fragmentation? We've been talking about 27 different states, 27 different but increasingly harmonized legal system. Is this the root cause or is fragmentation just Brussels language for deeper failure in capital formation?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:05:34]:

I wouldn't say it's root cause. What we are looking at with the Eu Ying Inc. Is to advance, let's say, I mean startups being founded everywhere and are run everywhere in Europe. What we are aiming at is removing unnecessary overheads and making it more easier. It's like advancing.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:06:00]:

When a founder asks why is this easier in Delaware than in Europe? What is the shortest honest answer? He's smiling. He's smiling for everybody who's listening to that.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:06:19]:

Yeah. I mean I'm in German so I have most experience here in Germany. So let me give a couple of examples. When you want to, from a German perspective. If you want to found a business in Germany, one thing you have to do is you have to physically go to the notary and they are. Yeah. And you have to sign, assign the role over there. You have to be present.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:06:47]:

Oh, and we may add that they reading out the whole contract loud. So that means not everybody knows it and it's just a signing ceremony, but you sit there, depending on the length of the contract, for hours.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:07:03]:

Yes. I mean I recall one notary, he was once telling me, you can dance in this room, you can sleep here. The only requirement I have is you have to be in the room. And if someone in between has to go to the toilet, the whole procedure will pause for like five minutes because not everyone is in the room in the same room. And I mean when you're at the stage of founding a company, this is probably not so complicated. But when we're later on then talking about financing rounds or an exit, then it gets complicated because then you have to like 10, 20, I don't know how many people have to be in the same room or they need a power of attorney. And this is then becoming increasingly complex. If you have people from abroad involved, like you have an international investor and he needs, if either he comes, he flies into the country and is present, which means costs days of time wasted or he gets the power of attorney.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:08:11]:

So someone else can represent this person. But if you're coming from abroad, you have to go and find a notary which is something very uncommon outside of Germany. And then you also have to go to the embassy and get an apostille which then certifies that the notary has done something. Correct. So this is just very complicated. And if I invest in a UK company for instance, it's just a docusign. Yeah. So it's much faster and more convenient.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:08:47]:

And you have so many like US investors you say okay, I like your product, you guy from Germany. But I mean let's stay friends. I won't come over from this. I am going to invest my money in the UK company and this is happening so often and vice versa. Founders are saying I'm going to set up shop in the US or in Estonia or wherever or in Switzerland because it's much easier there to this all bureaucratic overhead.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:09:17]:

I was anywhere wondering when you talk about Delaware, it's one of the smallest states in the US where basically everybody's domiciled if they're are not a few states. I do have one suspect in mind who is gunning for their business model as well here in the European Union. But let, let, let us put ourselves in the shoes of being an entrepreneur. Let's say you Inc. Gets live like this week next Monday. If that works exactly as as advertised. What changes first on Monday on the next Monday morning for a founder.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:09:59]:

I mean this then heavily depends on the national laws of the country where he's founding the company in. Yeah, I would say the you, you need some basic training in what Eu Ying is and how it differs from from, from the company. Take like a German GmbH or an SAS in France. How, how and where it differs. But I don't think that this is like a multi week learning course. This will be some, I mean probably your, your law lawyer will explain to you. The promise is that it is the, the differences are not so huge to a typical limited company type so it will not be difficult to learn it. And once you've done it the first time, I think you're pretty easy pre easily prepared for the next one or for the next fundraise.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:11:03]:

So it's, it's not, it's not rocket science. I mean I've read the proposal and from what and it's not yet being accepted by the EU parliament so it's not enforced yet. But what the current proposal states, it's not going to be rocket science. If you can found a limited company, you will also of the national type, you will be able to found it in the EU Ying style.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:11:32]:

So there's no real big difference on the first Monday morning when this becomes reality.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:11:39]:

I mean what have they done in the EU commission? They have looked at different countries and what works best in each country and they have tried to take the best of the national laws and they have been, I mean one has to say there has been an initiative, the EU Inc initiative who initiated the whole process with a proposal but there has also been a consultation process from the EU Commission last year where, where there have been many interviews with people from the ecosystem. So they have listened to what are the requirements of the ecosystem.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:12:24]:

That, that's already a very important piece because if you listen to the people from the ecosystem you usually come up with good and pragmatic solutions. Part of the EU Inc. Is a 48 hour incorporation. If, if that actually works, is it a breakthrough or is the speed just secondary to trust and enforceability of this new legal construct?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:12:53]:

And I think it will be some kind of breakthrough. Yes, I'm aware. I mean it's not like only founding a company. It is also of, because of you need a tax ID and a value added tax id, such stuff. And I know stories of founders here in Germany who've been waiting like three to four months for their tax id which means if you don't have your tax ID you cannot write any invoice, you cannot earn any money. This is just ridiculous.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:13:28]:

You cannot deduce any VAT here in Germany.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:13:32]:

So you, so this is going to be sped up. I mean can you explain me why you should wait four months for a VAT number? I mean it's just a random number.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:13:47]:

So I, I have to admit I, I'm physically located very, very close to you. And I assume we do have the same finance amp who's responsible for that. And I always have gotten my VAT number in like a week, two at the most. But you have to say you write them an email, but they can't reply via email. They write you back a letter, but for a letter they're fast.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:14:16]:

Yeah, that's right. But I know stories of founders who've been waiting for months and not in, not in Frankfurt where we are located, but in other areas of Germany. And this is just ridiculous because you cannot, if you cannot write any invoices, you cannot start your effectively start your business, you cannot pay your employees and so on. And this is another big breakthrough of EU Inc. Because they say, or the law says. No, it's not a law, it's a. Well, you know, the EU Yin.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:14:53]:

Let's stick to the term regulation.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:14:55]:

Yeah, that was.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:14:55]:

Thank you. That covers all of it.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:14:57]:

So the regulation says you have to complete the initial process within 48 hours and this also includes granting a tax number. And this will be then much faster than most of the current national limited companies.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:15:26]:

The proposal is optional and national forms stay in place. You just referred to the GmbH, the UG and so on and so forth. So does you ink reduce fragmentation or does it just add a new route through it?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:15:44]:

Well, it will depend on the acceptance. I would guess if all our so called dreams are coming true with the EU Inc. Nobody will found a startup based on the national traditional company type anymore. So fragmentation will be reduced. Or what also could happen is that the national company types will be reformed that they match the quality of the EU Inc. So then we still would have some kind of fragmentation. But looking at potential future international investors, it would always be a wise idea to take the EU Inc. And not the national form.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:16:30]:

And I would say right now there's a 5050 chance for both scenarios playing out. Not meaning that startup founders will maybe as a default setting have the EU Inc. But rather that it can turn out very well or very bad that they'll depend on a lot of other influences. You just referring to the legal forms here, for example, the GmbH in Germany. I was wondering what has to be true for founder to choose this over the term for example GmbH. Because right now a lot of investors in Germany know the GmbH that's the default model for setting up a startup. What needs to happen in order to make this really EU Inc. The default option? Does it have to be that? There are also.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:17:27]:

We already interviewed standard investment terms. So basically you have a standard legal Entity, you have standard investment terms and it makes a process more smoothly, meaning only the investment part here, not the looking for investors, pitching investors and all that stuff that stays the same.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:17:50]:

So I mean from a legal perspective, what needs to happen. It is now in proposal status from the EU commission, so they have now asked the national parliament for their feedback and then the, the member states have to agree on it and the EU Parliament. So there's still some legal work to do. This process will take for the rest of the year, I would suspect, and of course it still can happen that the proposal will be changed, modified because of the feedback. And once this then comes into force, we can start founding EU Inks. And for that I think it will be very wise to have some kind of standard agreements to be prepared. This is something which for instance my organization band will do. We have been doing this for years for Germany where we have been providing standard drafts of the usual contracts together with the German Startup Association.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:19:10]:

So I mean we have the standard shareholders agreement, we have a standard convertible loan agreement and so on. So it is very likely that we will also provide a standard agreement for EU incs and so on. And once these happen, then once these have been developed, I mean, yeah, let's go.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:19:33]:

If, if there's a really smooth process of doing that with very easy terms like almost standard. I know lawyers hate standard and they always have to be adopted and I do believe in some, in most circumstances that is true. But if there's a standard, if there's are successful examples that, that might take the cake.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:20:06]:

Can you repeat the question?


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:20:09]:

What has to be true for a founder to choose EU Inc over German GmbH in the first place?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:20:15]:

What, what has to be true? I mean we, we need to, to fully follow this digital only route. Yeah, if this is happening, is really happening. And by the way, the proposal reminds us multiple times it's not like a general principle. And the proposal is digital only. It says this in many clauses and just to make sure it must be digital only, there must not be any paper involved. So repeatedly. Yeah, but if this becomes true, then this is a huge leap forward because then we just sit down at our computers and I mean we can still meet in person, but then we can do all the contractual stuff remotely. And by the way, this is something which works in other countries already, like the UK have been saying.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:21:18]:

So if anyone is skeptical if this is a good idea to remove, to move to digital only, just look into other countries. It's working, it's no issue and it's much more Efficient and it's much less expensive.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:21:32]:

And I would also like to have the notary appointment in such a digital form. If there's a tool, that will be just great. Nicholas, where does the proposal solve a real problem? Found a problem. Where does it still read more like institutional elegance than real operators operate reality?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:21:56]:

I'd like to put forward two examples. Just. Yeah, first thing is the EU Inc. Is looking at a standardized employee share option program which will be the case across or which will be in effect across the whole European Union. This is something we don't have yet. When you've got employees working in another EU country, things are getting, I wouldn't say difficult, but different. So you know you have the single one, your employee share option plan, which is very important for startups. And again, it's digital only.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:22:44]:

That is a game changer. And thirdly, I've mentioned that earlier in this session, when you're talking to investors, they will know this kind of company type, so you won't have to explain to them how it works. And they will. For them it will be much easier to invest abroad. So particularly looking at US early stage investors, they will only have to learn EU Inc. Once and not British Limited, French SAS, German GmbH and so on.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:23:29]:

So you already talked about early stage investors. Everybody knows the European Union needs to change a lot, but also in their capital allocation. And until then they need a lot of investment capital from abroad. So what is the first thing a sophisticated investor will test before they decide that EU Inc. Company is genuinely fundable?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:23:55]:

You mean in general as a. As a company type? Yeah, I.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:24:02]:

And by the way, when you've been talking about the EU Inc. I thought there's a lot of market potential in Asia and North America right now for lawyers to learn about the EU Inc. And how to invest in them. But that's a different topic.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:24:17]:

Yeah, I'm pretty sure. I mean, I have read the proposal, but this does not mean I'm ready to found a EU Inc. Yet. Probably what I will do is when this happens the first time, I will talk to my lawyer and get some input from him and say what are the standard drafts and how does it look like? And obviously things are changing. For instance, when you're coming From a German GmbH, the list of shareholders is placed publicly in the company registry. So we in Germany are used to that. We know for every GmbH it's publicly known, the company register is the source of truth. Who owns the business.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:25:09]:

This is going to change because in the future the company register. So who's a shareholder and how much does he own is being maintained by, by the company itself or a trusted service provider. Yeah, this is how it works in, for instance, in the US or also in the uk. So it's nothing. It's not completely new concept, but it will change. So German investors or founders who have been working with GmbH before will need to understand how this is different now. Yeah, so we all have to learn that. But again, I don't think this is a really complicated thing.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:25:57]:

This is established best practice in other countries. So no worries. And I'm pretty sure if you're a French founder or a person who has invested in France multiple times, then obviously EU Inc. Will be different. You have will have to learn the rules. That is how it works. It's a new, it's a new regime. It's the 28th regime.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:26:21]:

It, it is not an exact copy of the other 27 regimes.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:26:28]:

Mm. Guys. If the whole promise is one European standard, but disputes, enforcement and a lot of practical reality still run through national systems, where exactly does the standard become reality? We'll be back with some more questions with Nicolaas after a short ad break. Nicholas, welcome back. Delaware works because people trust in the predictability of, of outcomes. So what is the European equivalent of that predictability here?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:27:12]:

I don't understand the question.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:27:14]:

So basically when you do incorporate a company in Delaware, they're usually disputes, they're usually questions. And there's a lot of legal material judgments out there that you can read, that you can inform yourself. So what would be the European equivalent of that? How can you build that trust? Where's the way to do that?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:27:43]:

So the competent courts will be the national courts. As everything which is new. There will be cases brought to the courts and they were ruled. So we will have decisions on the EU Inc. In Spain, in Germany, in Italy and so on, which will perhaps will be contradictory. This could be an issue. However, I think we have the principle of subsidiarity both in the EU and for instance in Germany. So it happens all the time that a court from Berlin is a little bit in conflict to a court or decides differently than to a court in Frankfurt, and then it's being escalated to the next level.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:28:45]:

And I guess this will be the case in the early times of the EU Yink that that several court decisions need to be made the first time and then we will see how it evolves. Does that make sense?


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:29:05]:

That's basically how you build that legal trust. But we'll still have some fragmentation in the start and for certain aspects. But I Do believe that's not different from the S where there's also a little difference depending on where you actually operate. I was wondering at what point would you tell a founder don't use EU Inc yet the legal certainty isn't still here. Would you encourage entrepreneurs you advise you want to invest in? Would you advise them to start with an EU Inc exactly at the first day? It's possible.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:29:52]:

I mean depends on your risk appetite probably. From that what I know as of now of course I suspect the proposal will not come to effect as it is being formulated now. So there will still be changes. But what I would not recommend to change. If you've got an existing startup to change, let's say from a GmbH into EU Inc on the first day. This probably doesn't make sense. In this case I would say okay, let's do this next year and to see how things work out and maybe let some other people who are more eager to try it out found the first EU Ying. Like if you're very much in a hurry then maybe stick to the old form and convert later.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:30:54]:

But generally it doesn't look like you have to, you have to wait for four years or so to before you found your, your EU Inc.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:31:05]:

Mm. We also may add that for larger companies there's already an SE Associate or Europa that larger companies do adap but they're very much bigger, very much late stage. So the proposal allows €0 or €1 minimum capital, digital share transfers and instruments like SAFE. So is this finally year becoming venture compatible or am I just simply reading too much into it?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:31:39]:

I mean it's, I would say it's pushed towards reality. Yeah. Why? Because I mean the nominal capital we have, like when you found a GmbH you have to pay in €25,000 and then you've got 25,000 shares of €1 each. But it does not make any difference whether it's €1 or €25,000 or €50,000 for typical startups. I mean they are raising much more capital and like €25,000 you burn in less than a month. So the concept of that, this is the capital amount you're responsible for is not realistic. So if your business goes bust and has a nominal share capital of 01 or €25,000 doesn't make a huge difference. So this is a reality check.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:32:55]:

The second thing you've mentioned, the SAFE is also a very good aspect of the EU Inc. Because again it, it will reduce fragmentation across the European Union. I yeah, I remember a couple of months ago I talked to Someone who had tried to establish a standard safe template for, for, for the, for all the European Union countries and said is it just not possible because of the different leg.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:33:39]:

We actually have the interview with EU funded project that is developing exactly that. You can go back to January. I do believe we published it there. We link it down here in the show notes. I was wondering what is the actual category mistake Europe has made for years? Is it to underestimate the legal friction or overestimate subsidy logic or misunderstanding what investors need to build trust?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:34:21]:

I would say this EU Inc thing is, is a very good example where politics respond rather fast to suggestions or initiatives because I mean it's not like having been requested by the startup community in the European Union for many years. It was just no one was talking about it. And so like I think it was two years ago, some people from the startup system ecosystem, they said wouldn't it be a good idea to have a EU Inc. Company type? And everyone was applauding and suddenly and everyone was saying oh this is a good idea. Why haven't we discussed this before? And then it was like Ursula von der Leyen who said good idea, we want to bring this forward, we want to do this. And the EU startup commissioner said we want the 28th regime. So it was like someone put a suggestion on the table and everyone was saying, not everyone, very many people were saying, oh this is a great idea, let's do it. I think this is a very nice example where politics react rather quickly.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:35:51]:

Yeah, I mean keeping fingers crossed, it's still not in force, so there may be obstacles coming up, but at least the EU commission has adopted this at very fast speed. From my perspective, if you're talking about, about politics in general, how, how they push, how fast they push initiatives,


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:36:19]:

talking about this politics reacting rather fast. Germany on the other side has spent years defending notarial and procedural complexity around the company law. So why do you believe the European route can succeed where we here in Germany struggled with domestic reforms?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:36:42]:

I mean honestly, here in Germany we have. Some people and to be frank, we have the notaries which are or will be losing revenue because they don't have the notary appointments because of capital raises anymore in the future. So of course it is understandable they will say ah, let's, let's stick to the notary system because it makes things much more secure and we can prevent fraud and so on. And it is a good thing to read out aloud for several hours the text because we are finding errors and we are helping the young founders who don't have that much experience. This is the line of argumentation. But on the other hand, again, what we in Germany are doing here is not happening anymore in most countries and we have proof that it's working. And which makes things even more ridiculous. Even in Germany we have company types like the Akzingesellschaft, like what is acting as airshaft in English


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:38:10]:

poc.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:38:11]:

Yeah. And some others where you can transfer shares without having to go to the notary. And we have to convince in the remaining process the. The politicians who are involved and especially those who are in the system in Germany that it will work because it works in other areas and with other company types. But still it is something we have to do.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:38:45]:

We totally have to do. I'm personally running unfortunately a little bit out of time. So let's close this with one last question. Nicolaus, on the European versus US growth polarity, where do you sit today? Do we need more American style speed, hyperscaling and standardization or more European style discipline but with less legal drag?


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:39:16]:

Well, you know, I'm a German, I'm a European. No, but I, I think we need the best of both worlds. I mean there is if like having the. Using the American speed and optimism and so on is something which you need if you want to build a successful startup. On the other hand, there's some criticism with respect to the Delaware Inc. As well because it's not as transparent and it's not as easy to understand who the shareholders are, for instance, and who owns it. Yeah. So probably it's best to have a good combination of both approaches just doing it.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:40:07]:

But to make sure you've got your bureaucratic aspects covered to a certain extent. Yeah,


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:40:24]:

Nicolaus, thank you very much. We may add that this was recorded on 13th April. We can only talk about what we know so far and I do believe since there will be consultations, there will be implementation into law, there will be long time horizons until this is implemented. I do believe there will be at least one, maybe more conversations about that in the future of startup rated. O Nicholas, thank you very much for being here and best of luck with your investments.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:40:56]:

Thanks and thanks for having me.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:40:58]:

Totally my pleasure. Have a good day. Bye bye.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:41:00]:

Bye. That's all folks.


Jörn "Joe" Menninnger | Founder, Editor in Chief | Startuprad.io [00:41:07]:

Find more news, streams, events and interviews@www.startuprad IO go.


Nikolaus D. Bayer | Deputy Chairman | Business Angels Deutschland [00:41:15]:

Remember, Sherry is carrying.

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