LiberaLaw
Orientation in unsettled times
History is back. With it returns the question of whether the structures still bear weight.
Geopolitical strain, denser regulation and broader supervisory powers are reshaping the conditions under which corporate and private affairs are conducted. What now matters is no longer the individual legal arrangement, but the structure in which it is set.
Capacity to act rests on a sound legal foundation. It must be verifiable and audit-proof, and it must connect to the institutions in which it operates.
Analysis and risk differentiation
Every sound structure begins with careful analysis. Relationships are mapped, risks are weighed and findings are translated into a coherent order:
- Mapping of legal relationships and shareholdings
- Risk differentiation by political, regulatory and liability factors
- Distillation into audit-proof documentation
- Definition of decision-making authority, reporting lines and escalation paths
Order as a model of governance
Legal quality is measured by the controllability of the structure it shapes. A reliable framework binds objectives, responsibilities, processes and external representation, securing lasting capacity to lead.
- Allocation of competences, duties and liability
- Stability across phases of growth, crisis and transition
- Communication with authorities, investors and counterparties
- Adaptability when geopolitical and regulatory conditions shift
Analytical method
With the return of history returns the need to test what had been taken for granted. Structured analysis reads facts, examines assumptions and orders findings before drawing conclusions. It is shaped by a field of work in which the unknown is not the exception but the precondition of every assessment, and it carries that precision into legal advice, not through engagement with the matter itself, but through the distance maintained towards it.
LiberaLaw
PRIVATE EQUITY
Private Equity is legally exacting because capital, influence and liability must be brought together within a structure that is clearly allocated and remains enforceable over time. What matters is foresight in the design of the structure, not its later execution.
At its centre lie the source of capital, the clear allocation of ownership and voting rights, and a liability-resilient overall structure that withstands regulatory scrutiny while preserving room to act. Added to these are demands that have grown weightier in recent years: extended transparency obligations, sector-specific supervision, geopolitically motivated restrictions, investment screening, and seamless documentation of shareholding and control.
The four phases – formation, growth, restructuring, transfer – interlock. Formation determines what will be administered; administration documents what restructuring will examine; restructuring decides what may yet be transferred. Advice that overlooks this interconnection solves problems in one phase at the expense of the next.
LiberaLaw
PRIVATE WEALTH
Private wealth touches ownership, family and provision at once. Whoever holds wealth must clarify to whom it is attributed, who may dispose of it, and how it endures across generations. The task of legal design is to bring these dimensions into a sound order. Only structured order makes protection lastingly effective.
At its centre stand economic objectives, family decision-making and supervisory requirements. They must be brought together into a single overall structure. To these are added demands once thought to lie outside the private sphere: international reporting frameworks, sanctions regimes, and tightened due-diligence duties of banks and professional intermediaries.
The four phases – building, administration, protection, transfer – are intertwined. Administration documents what protection will later test under strain; protection determines what may still be transferred. Advice that handles these phases in isolation diminishes the effect that the order as a whole would otherwise unfold over time.
Private Equity
Formation is not a purely technical act, but a structuring undertaking. Whoever sets out shareholdings, control rights and responsibilities clearly from the outset establishes a sound foundation. Every decision in this phase carries forward, in operations, in perception and in the capacity to steer.
Growth means heightened attention. What matters is a structure that grows with it: clear relationships, legally secure processes, dependable documentation. The aim is not control, but order — an order that admits both adaptability and trust, internally and externally.
Restructuring is not a retreat, but an expression of governed adjustment. Whoever examines structures, secures liability and clarifies decision-making lays the ground for renewed stability. What counts is not speed, but quiet order, verifiable, sound and institutionally compatible.
An exit is a strategic point of transition. Capital arrangements, conditions of completion and duties of cooperation must be legally consistent before they are enacted. It is not closure, but order in transition, that decides between continuation, reinvestment or fresh beginning.
Private Wealth
Asset development begins with order, not with returns. Whoever attends to legal clarity at an early stage establishes the foundation on which wealth holds across time. In an environment of dense requirements, it is the precision of the structure that matters, sound, controllable, verifiable.
Responsibility presupposes order. Whoever entrusts wealth must clarify decision-making paths, control rights and questions of liability. Asset management is not an act of trust, but a process of order, documented, controllable and institutionally compatible.
Asset protection takes effect before protection becomes necessary. It arises not from seclusion, but from clearly drawn limits of access. Whoever orders matters early retains room to act, for stability within the family, security beyond it, and lasting autonomy.
Transfer is not a loss of control, but a process that can be shaped. Structural preparation safeguards not only assets but also the relationships in which they stand. What is decisive is the legal order that bears the transition, for trust across the generations.
