Contract & Commercial Advisory
Contract and commercial advisory drafts, reviews, and negotiates the commercial agreements that govern business relationships across jurisdictions — from joint venture agreements and concession contracts to supply agreements, management contracts, licensing arrangements, and the service level agreements that define outsourced operations. In the Gulf, where many commercial relationships involve government-related entities, sovereign counterparties, and multi-jurisdictional operations, contract quality determines not just commercial outcomes but regulatory compliance and dispute resolution options.
Contract Advisory
Kaelo advises on: contract drafting and negotiation (commercial terms, risk allocation, performance obligations, liability caps, indemnities), dispute clause design (arbitration agreements, governing law selection, jurisdiction clauses — the provisions that determine how disagreements are resolved and which party has procedural advantage), template library development (creating standardised contracts that can be adapted for specific transactions, reducing legal costs and ensuring consistency), and the contract management systems that enable organisations to track obligations, expiry dates, renewal options, and the compliance requirements embedded in complex commercial agreements. Our legal practice covers contract advisory across DIFC, Singapore, and Seychelles law.
Gulf Commercial Context
Gulf commercial contracts navigate: choice of law complexity (DIFC law, UAE federal law, English law, and Sharia each offer different commercial frameworks), language requirements (UAE mainland contracts may require Arabic versions that take legal precedence), government contract provisions (sovereign immunity, government procurement regulations, offset requirements), and the relationship between formal contract terms and the informal commercial understandings that Gulf business culture relies upon. The advisory mandate ensures that formal contracts accurately reflect commercial intent while providing the legal protection that institutional operations require.
Contracts are not legal documents — they are commercial documents with legal consequences. The advisory mandate is to ensure that every contract serves the commercial purpose it was designed for while providing the legal protection that institutional governance demands.