A shareholder in a Malaysian private limited company or Sdn Bhd holds two layers of rights – those provided by law under the Companies Act 2016, and those negotiated privately through a Shareholders’ Agreement (SHA).
Many disputes trace back to a shareholder understanding only one of these layers and assuming it covers the other.
To help, our guide brings both layers together in one place as we explain:
- statutory rights every shareholder holds by default
- where those rights typically fall short
- how an SHA is used to fill the gaps, and
- when shareholders should actually put one in place
Let’s begin.
Default rights under the CA 2016
Every shareholder in a Sdn Bhd holds a set of default rights under the Companies Act 2016 (CA 2016), which generally includes:
- the right to vote at general meetings
- receive notice of meetings
- receive dividends once declared
- inspect certain company records, and
- transfer or exit a shareholding subject to the company’s constitution
A shareholder’s ability to influence shareholder resolutions generally scales with the size of a shareholder’s stake – control over major decisions such as approving a merger typically sits with shareholders holding a much larger stake, though a minority shareholder may still be able to requisition a meeting or request certain information.
For the full breakdown of rights by shareholding percentage, see our guide to default shareholder rights under the Companies Act 2016.
Where statutory rights fall short
Statutory rights provide a baseline but are not designed around the commercial realities of a specific business.
A shareholder relying solely on the CA 2016 may face several gaps:
- no agreed valuation mechanism if a shareholder wants to exit or is bought out
- no guaranteed say over major decisions without a large enough stake
- no structured process for resolving disagreements between shareholders
- no forced exit route if a relationship between shareholders breaks down
These gaps are why most companies with more than one shareholder eventually put an SHA in place.Without an SHA, a company falls back entirely on default rules of CA 2016 which as we cover in our 7 reasons to have a Shareholders’ Agreement,risks avoidable disputes due to lack of clarity.
How an SHA fills the gaps
An SHA is used to negotiate additional rights and protections that the CA 2016 does not provide by default.
The specific clauses vary between companies, but the following are commonly included:
| Mechanism | What It Does |
| Reserved matters | Requires shareholder or board approval before major decisions are made. |
| Pre-emption rights | Gives existing shareholders first right to buy new or existing shares before they go to a third party. |
| Tag-along rights | Allows a minority shareholder to join a sale on the same terms as the majority. |
| Drag-along rights | Allows a majority shareholder to compel minority shareholders to join a full company sale. |
| Deadlock mechanisms | Sets out how disagreements are resolved when shareholders cannot reach agreement. |
| Share transfer restrictions | Regulates who shares may be sold or transferred to, and under what conditions. |
| Founder protection | Preserves a founder’s control even after their shareholding is diluted. |
| Minority protections | Bundles several of the above (and more) to prevent a majority shareholder from acting unilaterally. |
These clauses are negotiated once and generally apply for as long as the SHA remains in force, though they should be revisited as a company’s ownership structure changes.
Rights that shift by context
Certain aspects of shareholder rights depend heavily on the situation a company is in. These commonly come up in the following contexts:
Updating an existing SHA
An SHA signed at incorporation may no longer reflect the company’s current ownership or control once new investors come in or a founder exits. Our tips for updating a shareholders’ agreement set out when a Deed of Adherence is enough, and when a full restatement is needed.
Mergers and acquisitions
Where a seller retains a stake after a deal, the SHA regulates the relationship going forward and can serve as interim governance while the transaction completes, as explained in our article on SHAs in M&A transactions.
Exiting the company
A shareholder may exit through exit mechanisms negotiated in the SHA or fall back on statutory exit routes under the CA 2016. The latter tends to be narrower and slower than a properly negotiated exit clause.
Family-owned businesses
Family SMEs face additional considerations around succession and roles that a standard SHA template may not address. See our guide to SHAs for family-run businesses.
Silent or passive investors
A silent investor in Malaysia generally holds the same statutory rights as any other shareholder of the same share class but often negotiates additional information or exit rights in exchange for staying out of day-to-day management.
When to put an SHA in place
The earlier an SHA is signed, the more shareholders are negotiating from a position of goodwill rather than conflict. In practice, this generally happens at one of the following points:
- company incorporation, where there is more than one shareholder from day one
- a new investor coming in, even where the amount involved is small
- before a funding round closes, when ownership is often restructured
- before a material change in shareholding or control
The pattern throughout is to draft an SHA before disagreements arise, not after, since terms negotiated during a dispute rarely favour either side.
Key takeaways
- Every Sdn Bhd shareholder holds default rights under the CA 2016, but these scale with shareholding size and leave several practical gaps.
- An SHA is the standard way to fill those gaps, most commonly through reserved matters, pre-emption, tag/drag-along, and deadlock clauses.
- Rights and protections differ depending on context, such as M&A, exits, family ownership, or passive investment.
- An SHA works best when signed early, ideally at incorporation or before a material change in ownership.
Let ELP draft your Shareholders’ Agreement
Whether you are incorporating with a co-founder, bringing in a new investor, or reviewing an existing SHA, the rights that matter most are usually the ones left undocumented. We assist business owners and investors with drafting and reviewing shareholders’ agreements tailored to their company’s specific ownership structure. Contact us for an initial consultation.
FAQs on shareholder rights in Malaysia
Q: Do I need an SHA if my company already has a constitution?
A: A constitution and the Companies Act 2016 provide a baseline, but neither addresses private commercial arrangements specific to your shareholders, such as reserved matters, exit terms, or dispute resolution. Most companies with more than one shareholder put an SHA in place alongside their constitution.
Q: What rights does a minority shareholder actually have in Malaysia?
A: By default, a minority shareholder can vote, receive dividends once declared, and access certain company records, but has limited influence over major decisions. Additional protections, such as reserved matters or tag-along rights, generally need to be negotiated through an SHA.
Q: Can a majority shareholder force me to sell my shares?
A: Only if the SHA or constitution includes a drag-along clause or similar compulsory transfer provision. Without one, a majority shareholder generally cannot force another shareholder to sell. Conversely, a minority shareholder cannot force the majority shareholder to buy their shares if they cannot find a third-party purchaser.
Q: What happens if my co-founder and I can’t agree on a decision?
A: Without a deadlock mechanism in place, disagreements can stall a company indefinitely, particularly where shareholding is split 50:50. An SHA can set out a resolution process, ranging from a casting vote to a buy-sell arrangement between the shareholders.
Q: Do silent or passive investors have the same rights as active shareholders?
A: It depends on the shares they hold and what has been negotiated. A silent investor generally holds the same statutory voting and dividend rights as other shareholders of the same share class, but may separately negotiate enhanced exit rights.
Q: When should I update my SHA?
A: Whenever there is a material change in ownership or control, such as a new investor coming in, a shareholder exiting, or a shift in voting dynamics. Minor changes may only require a Deed of Adherence rather than a full update.




