Geopolitics and International Structures: What the Middle East Conflict Means for Business. A Guide by REVERA Law Group
In this material, REVERA law group examines how regional instability in the Middle East affects international business: logistics, payments, banking compliance, sanctions control, corporate group structures and the choice of jurisdictions.
The focus of the material is not on political forecasting, but on the practical implications for business.
In conditions of heightened uncertainty, companies need to understand how to build resilient international structures, reduce dependency on a single hub, and prepare their banking, contractual and payment architecture in advance.
What this material is about
The material shows why, for business, the key issue is becoming not the conflict itself, but its infrastructural consequences:
- volatility in shipping and marine insurance;
- increased requirements from banks;
- stronger KYC/AML, sanctions screening and control over cross-border payments.
Particular attention is paid to the changing role of key jurisdictions: the UAE, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Singapore, Hong Kong, Serbia and Hungary.
| The material examines international structuring models for IT companies, SaaS businesses, marketplaces, digital platforms and tech-enabled services. |
How this material is useful for business
The material helps businesses understand which structural decisions will become critical in the near future, in 2026–2030:
- how to move away from single-hub dependency;
- when to choose a dual-hub or multi-jurisdiction structure;
- where to locate IP;
- how to separate dev, sales, operations and holding functions;
- why payment architecture is becoming one of the key elements of an international structure;
- which mistakes most often lead to account freezes, investor issues and difficulties during due diligence.
| The practical value of the material lies in the fact that it translates geopolitical risks into the language of business architecture: jurisdictions, banks, IP, payments, substance, contracts and compliance. |
Realities and trends reflected in the material
The material identifies several key market realities.
- First, the simple model of “one foreign company for everything” is ceasing to work. Banks are increasingly assessing not only the legal correctness of a structure, but also its operational logic: beneficial ownership, economic substance and transaction rationale.
- Second, the UAE remains significant, but its role is changing. It continues to be an important jurisdiction for sales, investors, management, MENA, commodities, Web3 and lifestyle relocation, but it is no longer a universal answer for every task. The material specifically highlights the formula for the coming years: UAE + Central Asia.
- Third, Central Asia is considered not as a “fallback airfield”, but as a fully fledged region for building new corporate structures. Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan are described as jurisdictions for operating business, development, payroll, regional contracts and backup payment circuits.
- Fourth, IP structuring is becoming a mandatory element. The material emphasises that where the IP is located is where investors, transactions and exits are located. Errors in the IP chain may lead to delayed due diligence and the need for costly restructuring.
- Fifth, the key legal product of the coming years is shifting from incorporation to a payment architecture memo and the creation of a functioning international system.
Who this material is for
The material will be useful for companies that operate, or plan to operate, internationally, especially where the business has development, sales, clients, investors or payment flows across different jurisdictions.
The material is primarily addressed to:
- IT companies with development teams in Russia or the CIS;
- SaaS companies with clients in the US, the EU, the UK or MENA;
- B2B and B2C digital platforms;
- fintech and payment companies;
- marketplace businesses;
- VC-backed start-ups;
- companies with international billing;
- businesses dependent on Stripe, Adyen, Paddle and other PSPs;
- companies that already use the UAE and are considering a second circuit;
- founders preparing for investment, due diligence or restructuring.
Practical value
The material helps assess whether a business’s current structure is ready for the new reality: whether it passes banking compliance, is clear to an investor, protects IP, makes intra-group payments explainable, and avoids dependency on a single hub or one jurisdiction.
The material contains practical conclusions regarding international structures and their operation: corporate architecture, IP ownership, sanctions compliance, tax model, contractual framework, payment architecture and banking operations.
Today, businesses need not a standalone company abroad, but a resilient international legal system that can withstand the requirements of banks, investors, counterparties and a changing geopolitical environment.
Read the guide
REVERA helps businesses enter new markets: together with tax and corporate law specialists, we select the optimal jurisdiction, build the corporate structure and develop a step-by-step plan for setting up a company abroad
Author: Anna Miritskaya
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