For the purposes of EC Recommendation 2003/361/EC linked enterprises are enterprises that are related through an enterprise:
Essentially, these are tests of ‘control’;
enterprises are linked if one of them directly or indirectly
controls, or has the capacity to control, the affairs of the other.
It is possible for an enterprise to be controlled by more
than one other enterprise at the same time.
Companies within a group will generally be linked
enterprises.
Enterprises are also linked enterprises if a relationship of the
sort listed above exists through an individual or group of
individuals acting together. But this linkage through individuals
is only made if the enterprises are engaged (wholly or partly) in
the same markets or in ‘adjacent markets’.
In this context adjacent markets are markets for products or
services that are directly upstream and downstream of each
other.
Where an enterprise is a linked enterprise the ceiling tests for
staff head count, turnover and balance sheet total (
CIRD91400) are applied to the
aggregates of figures in its own accounts and those from the
accounts of all its linked enterprises. Note that this aggregation
brings together
all of the amounts included in the accounts of the
linked enterprises, irrespective of the degree of control that
exists.
Where consolidated accounts exist it is the figures from the
consolidated accounts that are considered when applying the ceiling
tests.