Corporate

If a Company Already Has Articles of Association, Is a Shareholder Agreement Still Necessary?

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22 MIN READ
ABSTRACT

Anyone who has registered a company knows that when establishing a company, the articles of association are an essential legal document required for registration with the Market Supervision Administration. For limited liability companies, China's Company Law does not require a shareholder agreement (investment agreement or promoter agreement) for company establishment. In practice, many shareholders have doubts: What is the purpose of a shareholder agreement? If there are only articles of association without a shareholder agreement, are there any legal risks? If a shareholder agreement is to be signed, how should it be structured?

Introduction

Anyone who has registered a company knows that when establishing a company, the articles of association are an essential legal document required for registration with the Market Supervision Administration. For limited liability companies, China’s Company Law does not require a shareholder agreement (investment agreement or promoter agreement) for company establishment.

In practice, many shareholders have doubts: What is the purpose of a shareholder agreement? If there are only articles of association without a shareholder agreement, are there any legal risks? If a shareholder agreement is to be signed, how should it be structured?

I. Differences Between Articles of Association and Shareholder Agreements

The articles of association are the organization’s and operational norms of a company. Article 11 of China’s Company Law provides: “A company must be established in accordance with the law and formulate its articles of association. The articles of association are binding on the company, its shareholders, directors, supervisors, and senior management personnel.”

A shareholder agreement is an agreement signed by shareholders during or after the establishment of a company to clarify the rights and obligations among the parties. Its essence is a partnership agreement among shareholders.

II. The Value and Role of Signing a Shareholder Agreement

Many people who have actually registered companies are aware that the Market Supervision Administration provides standardized articles of association templates, and in many regions, large-scale modifications to the articles of association template are not permitted. If the modifications are too extensive, the company registration may be rejected.

So what happens when shareholders genuinely need personalized agreements—such as arrangements regarding forms of capital contribution (including labor contributions), equity held on behalf of others, vesting, dilution, equity incentives, lock-up provisions, pricing for shareholder entry and exit, non-compete and confidentiality obligations, and dispute resolution procedures for issues that may arise during company establishment and operation?

Some might think: “Let’s establish the company first, and if problems arise later, we can resolve them by amending the articles of association.” Is this approach feasible?

According to Article 43 of the Company Law: “A resolution of the shareholders’ meeting to amend the articles of association, to increase or decrease the registered capital, or to merge, split, dissolve, or change the form of the company must be adopted by shareholders representing more than two-thirds of the voting rights.”

In other words, amending the articles of association requires convening a shareholders’ meeting with approval from shareholders holding more than two-thirds of voting rights. If the initial equity structure is poorly designed, or if significant disagreements arise among shareholders during operations preventing a unified resolution on amending the articles of association—or even preventing the normal convening of a shareholders’ meeting—then trying to resolve problems by changing the articles of association later may not work.

At the early stage of company establishment, partners are often motivated to cooperate for the success of the project. This is precisely the right time to solidify certain agreements.

III. What Should a Shareholder Agreement Cover?

It is recommended that the shareholder agreement cover the following aspects:

Company industry positioning and strategic objectives; shareholder capital contribution methods, equity structure and percentages, financial management, and information rights; division of responsibilities, compensation, voting rights arrangements, shareholder rights and obligations; equity vesting and dilution; equity incentives, equity lock-up, and transfer restrictions; shareholder entry and exit, pricing arrangements, and liquidation; shareholder non-compete and confidentiality obligations; shareholder liability for breach, dispute resolution, notices, and effectiveness.

1. Company Industry Positioning and Strategic Objectives

This may seem unimportant to many shareholders, but for a limited liability company, the personal nature of shareholder relationships is significant.

Many entrepreneurs with passion may start a business based on their love for and interest in the industry. They meet like-minded friends, gather capable and driven individuals, and hope to build something great together. The agreement should begin by articulating the company’s future industry positioning, strategic objectives, and the shared vision—serving to keep everyone focused on the original mission and prevent wavering during the entrepreneurial journey.

2. Capital Contributions, Equity Structure and Percentages, Financial Management, and Information Rights

This is the core content shareholders care most about, including:

① Capital contributions and timing. Except for special industries, shareholders operate under a subscription system for contributions, with no restrictions on whether contributions are made in cash, land, intellectual property, or physical assets. If labor contributions are desired, there are two common approaches in practice: one is for shareholders to grant the labor contributor “bonus shares” through nominee arrangements; the other is to establish a partnership through which the labor contributor invests in the company. Additionally, the agreement should clearly specify when capital contributions are due, so the company does not face cash flow problems.

② Equity allocation. To ensure fairness, equity should be allocated based on each shareholder’s contribution of resources. The agreement should include a reserved equity pool to address equity sources for introducing new partners, financing, and equity incentives.

③ Profit distribution ratios. Shareholders may agree on profit distribution ratios that differ from their capital contribution ratios. For technology-driven companies, investors who do not understand technology or management may simply want to ensure their returns without demanding involvement in daily operations. Their profit distribution ratio can be increased accordingly, balanced by giving them fewer voting rights to allow technology-oriented shareholders to control management.

④ Financial management, surplus reserves, and information rights. Clear agreements on fund management and use reduce conflicts. It is recommended to agree on surplus reserve ratios to prevent majority shareholders from arbitrarily extracting reserves without distributing dividends. Including provisions in the shareholder agreement that shareholders may copy original financial documents protects minority shareholders’ rights to information.

3. Division of Responsibilities, Salaries, Voting Rights, and Shareholder Rights and Obligations

① Clear division of responsibilities facilitates assessment and accountability. Shareholders must clarify their respective responsibilities to enable internal accountability when a shareholder’s negligence causes company losses.

② Clear salary arrangements for full-time founders prevent majority shareholders from extracting company profits through excessive salaries. At the early stage, founders may agree to defer salary in exchange for higher profit distribution ratios or dynamically adjusted equity percentages.

③ Clear voting rights. Voting rights are a core shareholder right. Shareholders may agree to separate voting rights from equity percentages, grant founders veto power, or enter into a “concert party agreement” to concentrate voting rights.

④ Rights and obligations can be defined in conjunction with the company’s governance structure (shareholders’ meeting, board of directors, board of supervisors, and management layer) and their rules of procedure.

4. Equity Vesting and Dilution

Shareholders may agree on equity vesting standards and conditions, vesting amounts, and exercise requirements. When introducing new partners or financing, anti-dilution clauses can prevent founders or controlling shareholders from excessive equity dilution that would cause them to lose control.

5. Equity Incentives, Equity Lock-up, and Transfer Restrictions

① Equity incentives involve all shareholders’ vital interests and are closely related to company development. The method, source, and amount of equity incentives should be agreed upon in advance to avoid postponement due to disagreement. Equity incentives are not always necessary.

② Lock-up provisions maintain team stability. Shareholders may agree that allocated equity is locked up, during which departing shareholders must bear corresponding liability for breach.

③ Transfer restrictions are permitted under the Company Law. Reasonably limiting transfer restrictions or mandatory transfer provisions are legally valid as long as they reflect the shareholders’ true intentions.

6. Shareholder Entry and Exit, Pricing Arrangements, and Liquidation

The shareholder agreement should specify conditions for introducing new partners (“entry”). More importantly, it should address “exit” conditions and the buyback price for departing shareholders. It should also address liquidation obligations and distribution of remaining assets if the venture fails.

7. Non-Compete and Confidentiality

When partners leave, they take with them the knowledge, technology, and experience accumulated during the venture. Non-compete and confidentiality agreements protect the venture.

8. Liability for Breach, Dispute Resolution, Notices, and Effectiveness

Without liability for breach, even the best agreement cannot be enforced. Core issues that shareholders care about should have clear liability provisions. The agreement should also specify dispute resolution methods—courts or arbitration. For larger matters with complex procedures, court litigation is recommended, as arbitration is final with limited recourse, while courts provide two-instance review and potential retrial options.

RESEARCH TEAM

Shi Rongzhen holds a Master of Law degree and is an attorney at Long An (Shenzhen) Law Firm. He is a patent agent, Senior Corporate Compliance Specialist, mediator at the Beihai International Arbitration Court, a part-time associate researcher at the Macau International Arbitration Association, and a registered lawyer in the Estate Administrator pool of the Shenzhen Bar Association. He specializes in corporate affairs, intellectual property, commercial litigation, and marriage and inheritance legal affairs.