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Create an equity investment agreement valid under the laws of England and Wales. Covers investor classification under FSMA 2000, share subscription in GBP, allotment of shares under Companies Act 2006 s.551, disapplication of pre-emption rights under s.561, completion mechanics with SH01 filing, use of proceeds, EIS and SEIS tax relief provisions under the Income Tax Act 2007, company warranties, investor information rights and board observer seat, anti-dilution protection (weighted average or full ratchet), tag-along and drag-along rights, confidentiality, and conditions precedent. Governing law: England and Wales. Download as PDF or Word.

What Is a Investment Agreement (England & Wales)?

An Investment Agreement is a legally binding contract under the laws of England and Wales between a private limited company and an investor, governing the terms on which the investor subscribes for new shares in the company in exchange for a cash investment. It documents the equity investment transaction — the price per share, the class and number of shares to be allotted, the total consideration in pounds sterling, the completion mechanics, the investor's governance rights, and the ongoing obligations of both parties following completion of the investment.

Investment agreements are central to private equity and venture capital financing in England and Wales. Unlike a shareholder loan, an equity investment is permanent capital: the investor does not receive interest and the company has no obligation to repay the investment amount. Instead, the investor takes an ownership stake in the company — typically alongside existing shareholders — and expects a return through capital growth on a future exit event (trade sale, IPO, or secondary share sale) or through dividends if the company generates distributable profits. Equity investment therefore aligns the investor's financial interest directly with the long-term success of the business.

Key legislation: Companies Act 2006 (s.551 — directors' authority to allot shares; s.561 — statutory pre-emption rights of existing shareholders; s.570 and s.571 — special and ordinary resolutions to disapply pre-emption rights; s.580 — prohibition on issuing shares at a discount to nominal value; s.769 — obligation to issue share certificates within two months; and the Form SH01 return of allotment filing requirement); Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (FSMA 2000) and the Financial Promotion Order 2005 (FPO 2005) governing investor classification and financial promotion exemptions (Arts. 48, 50, and 19 FPO); Income Tax Act 2007 Part 5 (Enterprise Investment Scheme — 30% income tax relief); and Part 5A ITTOIA 2005 (Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme — 50% income tax relief). The Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 is typically excluded to maintain clean bilateral enforceability.

This template creates a comprehensive investment agreement that covers share subscription mechanics, FSMA investor classification, conditions precedent, use of proceeds, EIS/SEIS provisions with HMRC advance assurance obligations, company warranties, investor governance rights (board observer seat and quarterly information rights), anti-dilution protection on a down round, tag-along and drag-along rights on a company sale, confidentiality obligations, and all Companies Act 2006 filing requirements needed to legally complete the share allotment and update the company's register of members.

When Do You Need a Investment Agreement (England & Wales)?

When a startup or early-stage company raises its first seed or angel round from a business angel investor or a small venture capital fund, and needs a formal document recording the investor's commitment, the subscription price, and the rights attaching to the new shares.

When a company raises a Series A or later funding round and the investor requires formal contractual protections — including anti-dilution rights, information rights, a board observer seat, and tag-along/drag-along provisions — beyond the standard rights conferred by the company's articles of association.

When structuring an EIS or SEIS investment and both the company and investor need to ensure the transaction is documented in a way that supports the investor's tax relief claim, including provisions for HMRC advance assurance, qualifying trade requirements, and restrictions on disposing of shares during the three-year holding period.

When an existing shareholder makes an additional equity investment — rather than a shareholder loan — and the transaction needs to be documented separately from the original subscription to reflect the new price per share and any revised governance arrangements.

When an institutional investor, corporate venture fund, or family office makes a strategic investment and requires formal representations and warranties from the company about its financial position, assets, and business operations, along with indemnities for warranty breaches.

When preparing for due diligence in a subsequent funding round or trade sale, where investors and acquirers will expect to find properly documented investment agreements, board observer agreements, and shareholder rights provisions.

Without a formal investment agreement, the investor's rights are limited to those in the company's articles of association, which may not reflect the negotiated economic or governance arrangements. A written agreement also protects the company by setting out the precise conditions on which the investment is made.

What to Include in Your Investment Agreement (England & Wales)

Parties and FSMA Classification — Full identification of the company (registered name, number, and address) and the investor (name and address), together with the investor's classification under the Financial Promotion Order 2005 (high net worth individual, sophisticated investor, or institutional investor). The classification determines which FSMA exemption applies to the investment offer and affects the investor's legal protections.

Share Subscription — The number and class of shares to be allotted, the subscription price per share, the total investment amount in GBP, and the investor's expected percentage shareholding post-completion. The subscription price must be at least the nominal value of each share under s.580 CA 2006.

Companies Act 2006 Compliance — Confirmation that the directors have allotment authority under s.551 CA 2006, that pre-emption rights under s.561 CA 2006 have been disapplied by shareholder resolution under s.570/571 CA 2006, and that a return of allotment (Form SH01) will be filed at Companies House within one month of completion.

Completion Mechanics — The completion date, the payment mechanism (CHAPS bank transfer), the company's obligations on completion (issuing shares, updating the register of members, delivering the share certificate within two months), and Companies House filing obligations.

Conditions Precedent — Any conditions that must be satisfied before the investment completes, such as satisfactory completion of due diligence, HMRC advance assurance receipt for EIS/SEIS, shareholder resolutions, or a minimum co-investment threshold.

Use of Proceeds — How the investment funds will be deployed, broken down by purpose. This is particularly important for EIS/SEIS compliance, where the funds must be used for qualifying trade activities within a specified period.

EIS/SEIS Provisions — If the investment is intended to qualify for Enterprise Investment Scheme or Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme relief, the company's obligations to maintain qualifying status, to provide compliance certificates (EIS3/SEIS3), to seek HMRC advance assurance, and to notify the investor of any disqualifying event.

Company Warranties — Representations that the company is duly incorporated, has allotment authority, that the shares will be free from encumbrances, that due diligence information is accurate, and that there are no pending legal proceedings that would materially affect the company.

Investor Information Rights — If agreed, the investor's right to receive quarterly management accounts, annual audited accounts, and the annual budget. These rights protect the investor's ability to monitor the company's performance without a board seat.

Board Observer Rights — If agreed, the investor's right to send a non-voting representative to board meetings and receive board papers, without constituting a director appointment.

Anti-Dilution Protection — The type of adjustment mechanism (broad-based weighted average, narrow-based weighted average, or full ratchet) that applies if the company raises a subsequent round at a lower price per share, together with the mechanics for implementing the adjustment through additional share issuances.

Tag-Along and Drag-Along — The threshold for triggering tag-along (typically a majority stake sale) and drag-along (typically a 75% shareholder vote to accept an offer), ensuring the investor can participate in or be compelled to join an exit on equal economic terms.

Governing Law and Jurisdiction — Confirmation that the agreement is governed by the laws of England and Wales, with the courts of England and Wales having exclusive jurisdiction.

Frequently Asked Questions

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