Shareholders’ Agreements: The Strategic Safeguard Against Governance Deadlock
While disputes between shareholders may weaken a company’s governance, the absence of clear internal rules can ultimately jeopardise the company itself.
The creation of a company presupposes the existence of affectio societatis between shareholders — namely, a genuine intention to associate and collaborate in pursuit of a common venture. Such intention naturally implies a relationship founded upon trust.
However, establishing a business is one thing; ensuring its longevity is another. Even the strongest personal relationships may deteriorate over time.
Within a company, disagreements often arise from diverging strategic visions, unequal levels of personal involvement, conflicting expectations, an unforeseen departure of a shareholder, or the emergence of a crisis situation.
In the absence of clear rules governing the relationship between shareholders, tensions may escalate into deadlock — and deadlock can place the company itself at serious risk.
It is precisely in such circumstances that a shareholders’ agreement becomes essential.
A shareholders’ agreement is a contract entered into by all or part of the shareholders, in addition to the company’s constitutional documents. Its purpose is to organise the relationship between shareholders, establish specific governance rules, prevent disputes, and anticipate the company’s future developments.
Flexible and confidential in nature, it enables governance arrangements to be tailored to both the relationships between shareholders and the specificities of the underlying business venture.
50/50 Companies: A Fragile Balance Carrying Significant Risk
Companies held on a 50/50 basis are often appealing because of their apparent symmetry and equality.
Yet such equal ownership conceals a major risk: the absence of any controlling majority.
If the two shareholders disagree on a key decision, neither party is able to prevail. The disagreement therefore paralyses the company.
Such disagreements are far from uncommon. One shareholder may become more involved than the other; strategic visions may diverge; personal tensions may gradually emerge.
Without a shareholders’ agreement, no mechanism exists to resolve such disputes. Both the company and the personal relationship between the shareholders may deteriorate to the point of compromising the future of the project itself.
A carefully drafted shareholders’ agreement enables such situations to be anticipated and many disputes to be avoided, notably through:
A Governance Compass for Multi-Shareholder Companies
As a flexible, confidential, and forward-looking instrument, a shareholders’ agreement allows the parties to regulate with precision:
Tailored to the specific needs of the company and its shareholders, the agreement becomes a discreet yet strategic instrument essential to corporate stability.
In the Absence of a Shareholders’ Agreement: What Are the Concrete Risks?
Driven by initial trust and enthusiasm, many business partners incorporate a company without entering into a shareholders’ agreement. Yet the absence of a proper legal framework may rapidly expose the company to significant risks, including:
Ultimately, without a shareholders’ agreement, uncertainty prevails — and uncertainty is the enemy of sustainable business development.
Even Where There Is a Majority Shareholder: Why a Shareholders’ Agreement Remains Essential
It is often wrongly assumed that a shareholders’ agreement is unnecessary where one shareholder holds a majority interest. Yet such an agreement remains a fundamental instrument in all corporate structures, as it enables the parties to:
In certain cases, a shareholders’ agreement may even constitute a reassuring safeguard when bringing in an investor, securing a growth project, or organising a transfer of ownership.
A Bespoke Legal Instrument That Should Not Be Standardised
There is no such thing as a standard shareholders’ agreement. Every company, every group of shareholders, and every business project is unique.
A well-drafted agreement is one that reflects the actual needs of the parties: their objectives, their operating methods, any potential imbalances, and their future prospects.
For this reason, its drafting should be entrusted to a legal professional who will be able to ask the right questions, anticipate sensitive situations, and protect your interests.
Do Not Wait for a Crisis Before Taking Action
A shareholders’ agreement is not a sign of mistrust. It is a governance tool designed to prevent disputes and ensure the long-term stability of your project.
While indispensable in 50/50 ownership structures, a properly drafted shareholders’ agreement remains strategic in all other configurations.
www.west-avocats.fr
thierry.ygouf@west-avocats.fr
thierry.ygouf@west-avocats.ch
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