Company: G
Filing Date: 2025-11-14
Form Type: 424B5
Source: 0001140361-25-042317
Chunk: 117

Company: Genpact LTD
Filing Date: 2025-11-14
Form: 424B5
Chunk 117
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 to guarantee the indebtedness of another entity of the same group. However, it is generally admitted that the granting of a guarantee by a Luxembourg company for the obligations of another group company shall be subject to the following conditions: (i) it must be within the corporate purpose of the guarantor as set out in its articles of association; (ii) it shall correspond to a demonstrable and commensurate corporate benefit received by the guarantor company; and (iii) the financial obligations assumed by the guarantor must not be disproportionate to the financial capacity of the guarantor. Whether an action is in the corporate interest of a company is a matter of fact not a legal issue. The directors/managers of a company are those who are able to assess whether such company has a corporate benefit and interest in granting cross or up-stream or guarantees.

It is considered that a company may give a guarantee, provided the giving of the guarantee or security interest is covered by the company’s corporate objects and in the best interest of the company. The test regarding the guarantor’s corporate interest is whether the company that provides the guarantee/security interest receives**

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some consideration in return (such as an economic or commercial benefit) and whether the benefit is proportionate to the burden of the assistance. A guarantee/security interest that exceeds the guarantor company’s ability to meet its obligations to the beneficiary of the guarantee and to its other creditors would expose its directors or managers to personal liability. It cannot ultimately be excluded that granting of security interest/guarantee, which would be considered by a Luxembourg court as made in the absence of corporate interest, be declared void.

The Guarantee granted by the Subsidiary Guarantor may be limited to a certain percentage of, among other things, such Subsidiary Guarantor’s own funds (capitaux propres) and intra-group indebtedness. Finally, the Subsidiary Guarantor has been incorporated in the form of a private limited liability company (société à responsabilité limitée , or “S.à r.l.”). Enforcement on these entities will depend on their financial situation and will only be limited to their assets. Shareholders of a S.à r.l. cannot in principle be held liable for debts contracted by the S.à r.l.

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### LEGAL MATTERS
The validity of the notes offered by this prospectus supplement will be passed