Terry McCabe
Principal
Looking to start a new company with co-investors? Seeking seed capital from potential investors? Wanting to safeguard the succession of your company? Or just looking to protect your company’s value? Then you should be considering a shareholders’ agreement.
A shareholders’ agreement is an agreement regulating a company’s relationships, rights, responsibilities and obligations owed to its shareholders. Or put simply, it’s a tailored agreement that guides shareholders as to what they can and can’t do.
A well drafted shareholders’ agreement can provide a proper corporate governance framework for running a business efficiently, avoiding future costly disputes, and providing a stable structure. This in turn makes a company more attractive to future capital investors.
One of the main attractions of a shareholders’ agreement is that it is tailorable to a company’s individual circumstances. This is important because a company’s constitution rarely accommodates the special intentions of the shareholders in respect of managing the business.
For example, what if your company begins to generate significant profits and you and your co-investors can’t agree on how they should be applied. Do you take a dividend? Or should you reinvest them as working capital? Whatever the answer, a tailored shareholders’ agreement will provide a framework to assist in answering these questions.
A fully tailored shareholders’ agreement will address some or all of the following matters: share capital and management structure, appointment of directors, board meetings, voting rights, company financial accounts and reporting requirements, dividend policy, share sales, issues and transfers, tag and drag along rights, exit strategies, confidential information, shareholder restraints, warranties and dispute resolution mechanisms.
If you want to ensure that your shareholders’ agreement is fit for the needs of your company’s business and adequately addresses the above-mentioned matters, it is crucial that you understand, and can provide input on, the following key decisions:
If you require assistance in answering any of these key decisions, please contact Trent Le Breton or Danton Stoloff from McCabes’ Corporate group. McCabes has extensive experience in advising a wide range of businesses (including start-ups) on shareholders’ agreements and on issues that may arise in relation to them, and also has expertise in drafting fully tailored shareholders’ agreements.