Minority Shareholder Dispute | Reverse Solicitation Share Sale Case Study
Levi Strutton
Author: Levi Strutton |
Posted on
Learn how minority shareholders used a compliant reverse solicitation strategy to sell shares in a UK private company while avoiding financial promotion breaches.

Minority Shareholders Use Reverse Solicitation Strategy to Apply Pressure in Share Sale Dispute

Case Study: Minority shareholders in a private company wanted to sell their shares and apply pressure on an uncooperative majority shareholder. The Jonathan Lea Network structured a compliant “reverse solicitation” strategy and drafted carefully worded advertising to attract only exempt, self-certified investors, creating commercial leverage while staying within UK Companies Act and financial promotion rules.

Background: Share Sale Deadlock in a Private Company

Three minority shareholders in a private limited company wanted to sell their shares to the existing majority shareholder, who refused to buy them. To increase commercial pressure, they planned to place an advert in a specialist magazine to signal that they were open to approaches from third-party investors.

The Legal Challenge: Companies Act and Financial Promotion Restrictions

Private companies are restricted from offering their shares to the public under the Companies Act 2006 and are also caught by the UK financial promotion regime under FSMA. The key risk was that a magazine advert could be treated as a prohibited “offer to the public” or as an unlawful financial promotion, exposing the company and shareholders to regulatory issues.

Our Solution: A Compliant Reverse Solicitation Strategy

The Jonathan Lea Network designed a compliant “reverse solicitation” strategy. We drafted bespoke advert wording that gave only high-level information and clearly framed the advert as an invitation to discuss, not an offer that could be accepted on its terms. Any interested respondents were then taken through a controlled process: they first signed confidentiality agreements and then self-certified as high net worth or sophisticated investors (or other exempt categories) before receiving any detailed offer documentation.

By ensuring that any actual offer was made only to specific, vetted individuals who had taken the initiative to make contact, the structure stayed within the Companies Act private company restrictions and the financial promotion exemptions.

Outcome: Creating Leverage Without Regulatory Breach

The clients received clear, written advice, fully compliant advert wording and a robust audit trail demonstrating regulatory care. This allowed them to create commercial leverage without breaching the UK securities or financial promotion rules, all delivered on a pre-agreed capped fee.

Further Information

Unfortunately, it is difficult to sell minority shareholdings in a private company, other than to existing shareholders. Click here to read how to Sell Or Buy A Private Company Minority Shareholding.

And to find out more about Shareholder or Partnership disputes, click the links.

 

Disclaimer: The case studies on this website are provided for illustrative purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. All identifying details have been removed or altered to protect client confidentiality. Outcomes described are specific to the circumstances of each case and may not be indicative of future results. You should seek independent legal advice before taking any action based on the information provided.

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