If you are the owner or manager of a company with more than one shareholder then you are likely to benefit from having a shareholders’ agreement to sit alongside your articles of association. The reason is that, while your articles will provide you with a basic road map for dealing with company affairs and relations between members, a shareholders’ agreement will give you a detailed operating manual which covers a much wider range of issues and helps you to keep any sensitive information private.
It is not something you are legally obliged to have, but is something we thoroughly recommend for new business start-ups and established companies alike and which we can usually provide for a fixed fee.
The main benefit of having a shareholders’ agreement is undoubtedly the fact that, unlike your articles of association which must be filed at Companies House and are therefore available for everyone to see, your shareholders agreement is private.
It therefore provides an ideal means of agreeing the internal workings of the company and relations between members which you would prefer not to openly publicise, such as your policy on the payment of dividends and directors’ bonuses.
It also provides an opportunity to build in protections for members not commonly found in most company’s articles of association, such as restrictions on the sale or transfer of shares to unconnected third parties and on the activities of directors and members following their departure.
While every agreement is different, some of the most common issues addressed by the shareholders’ agreements are:
Our commercial solutions lawyers can help you to create a shareholders’ agreement tailored to your specific needs, which works well for your members and complements your articles of association. We can also help you to update the agreement as your company grows and as new members join and older members leave.
We are experienced in creating shareholders’ agreements for new corporate start-ups, for established companies who did not consider the need for such an agreement when they were formed, for companies going through a corporate restructure or a merger or acquisition and for private and commercial investors, particularly under equity financing arrangements pursuant to a joint venture initiative.
It is not just shareholder agreements that we can help with. We can also support you in a share sale by negotiating the terms of a share purchase agreement and in shareholder disputes by working alongside our dispute resolutions team.
Our team of dispute resolution are specialists in competition and antitrust disputes and have particular expertise in cross-border matters involving alleged breaches of EU competition law.
We have an excellent track record in achieving great results, even in cases of immense difficulty.
We are particularly valued for our ability to work collaboratively with other members of the IMD team and with external professionals, including tax advisors, to deliver advice that not only takes account of the problems at hand but any wider commercial considerations.
IMD Solicitors LLP,
1st Floor,
63 St Mary Axe,
London ,
EC3A 8AA
(meetings by appointment only)
IMD Solicitors LLP,
Suite 1N-C, 1st Floor,
Trafford House, Chester Rd,
Manchester,
M32 0RS
(meetings by appointment only)
IMD Solicitors LLP,
One Victoria Square,
Birmingham,
B1 1BD
(meetings by appointment only)