Structural order and capacity for completion
Exit processes are among the most sensitive phases in the life cycle of a company. What is decisive is a legal structure that creates clear responsibilities, transparent information situations and reliable mechanisms of completion. Whether sale, carve-out or succession: success arises where the legal framework is consistent and verifiable in relation to purchasers, authorities and other parties involved. Transfer situations develop along several conceivable courses; the legal architecture must hold across each of them.
Position assessment and pre-structuring
Every transfer of a company requires a sound initial picture:
- Determination of the appropriate transaction format.
- Analysis of lines of authority, control rights and governance processes.
- Identification of regulatory thresholds and reporting duties.
- Consolidation of tax and balance-sheet structural elements.
This overall view recognises critical interfaces at an early stage and forms the basis for a controllable course. It makes visible the points at which the course can tip in another direction.
Transparency and controlled access to data
Legal transparency is a precondition for stability in negotiation:
- Structured preparation of the relevant contracts and legal foundations.
- Verification of shareholding structures and decision-making powers.
- Identification of legal ambiguities and potential for conflict.
- Establishment of controlled, documented access to data.
A secured state of information strengthens the negotiating position and reduces asymmetric risks. It remains sound even when the other side changes its reading of the position.
Contract architecture and mechanisms of completion
A compatible exit calls for a precise architecture of contract and completion:
- Design of share and asset deals with clear allocation of risk.
- Regulation of accompanying instruments (escrow, payment mechanics, handover provisions).
- Securing of conditions, rights of withdrawal and approval requirements.
- Legitimation through the necessary resolutions and internal authorisations.
Soundness shows itself in completion: only structures capable of being executed hold up under external pressure. They are to be designed so that every participant recognises the point at which his decision determines the further course.
Coordination across jurisdictions
In cross-border transactions, alignment across several jurisdictions stands at the centre:
- Synchronisation of substantive and formal requirements of different legal systems.
- Involvement of local counsel to secure questions of recognition and enforcement.
- Examination of intra-group dependencies and financial or contractual structures.
- Provision against systemic discontinuities through accompanying measures.
Capacity to act arises from clear interfaces and consistent legal foundations. It holds even when political, regulatory or economic conditions shift during the procedure.
Conformity and legitimation
Legal verifiability secures acceptance and lasting effect:
- Compliance with all reporting, authorisation and consent requirements.
- Implementation of sanction-avoiding measures in the case of sensitive personal or capital structures.
- Documentation of decision-making paths vis-à-vis internal and external review bodies.
- Construction of sound systems of evidence for subsequent review.
Conformity not only protects against risks; it creates strategic freedom of movement. It preserves the reading of the transaction that holds up in retrospect as well.
Communication and transition
The exit calls for an ordered, legally secured architecture of transition:
- Preparation and proper drafting of all required corporate resolutions.
- Establishment of clear channels of communication and responsibilities.
- Coordination of transitions in governance, control rights and shareholding mechanisms.
- Securing of the transition through follow-on agreements and compliance structures.
An exit is successful when the resulting framework remains sound – legally, organisationally and operationally. It becomes sound where the different positions of interest of the participants are reflected in the architecture from the outset.
