When buying or selling a Malaysian business, a common structure for SMEs is a full business asset sale where the entire operation is transferred without taking over the Sdn Bhd entity behind it.
This is different from a share sale, where the buyer inherits the company’s assets, liabilities and ongoing obligations.
This article goes through the typical steps in a full business asset sale and how an Asset Sale & Purchase Agreement (SPA) helps anchor the transaction.
Let’s begin.
Process overview
Depending on size, industry, and complexity of assets (tangible or intangible), steps may vary but below is how a full business asset sale typically unfolds.
| Stage | What Happens |
| Initial discussions & NDA | Parties may first negotiate key commercial terms or enter into a letter of intent for exclusivity An NDA is usually signed to protect sensitive financial and operational information |
| Information exchange | The seller provides relevant financials, asset lists, licences, staff details and operational data for the buyer’s assessment |
| Due diligence | The buyer reviews assets, contracts, liabilities tied to assets, inventory (if applicable), and compliance matters The depth of review varies based on the size and nature of the business |
| Valuation & stock count | Parties agree on how assets are valued For businesses with inventory a joint stock count is typically conducted |
| Negotiation & finalisation of SPA | The Asset SPA is drafted to formalise agreed terms including assets, price, obligations, timelines and handover mechanics. |
| Signing & deposit | Upon signing of the SPA, the buyer pays a deposit (commonly 5-10%) unless one was already paid under a prior Letter of Intent |
| Conditions Precedent | These are specific matters that must be fulfilled by respective parties before completion (handover and balance of purchase price) |
| Completion & deliverables | The buyer pays the balance purchase price, and the business assets are handed over. Operational control shifts to the buyer |
| Post-completion obligations | This may include training, system transfers, change-of-ownership notifications and transitional support agreed between the parties |
Once the parties agree on the commercial steps, the SPA must set out the legal and operational terms that make those steps work in practice.
Key terms
The SPA sets out how the transfer will take place and captures the specific terms both parties must follow, and below are key terms commonly found in one.
| Key Term | What It May Cover |
| Asset list | What is being sold: equipment, inventory, IP, digital assets, customer lists, brand assets, licences (if transferable) |
| Purchase price & apportionment | How the total price is broken down (e.g., stock, equipment, goodwill) |
| Deposit | Amount, refundability, and circumstances where it may be forfeited |
| Payment terms and timeline | Schedule and mode of payments – whether by lump sum, staged payments, or contingent payments |
| Conditions Precedent | Approvals or consents needed before completion, such as landlord consent, licence matters, contract assignments / novations or employment transfers The SPA will identify the party responsible for each |
| Liabilities | What liabilities remain with the seller, and what (if any) the buyer will assume |
| Warranties & representations | Assurances on ownership, compliance, financial accuracy and condition of assets |
| Non-compete obligations | Restricts the seller from immediately starting a competing business |
| Completion and deliverables | What happens upon completion – handover of listed assets (tangible and intangible), documents, system access and operational control |
| Post-completion support | Training, transition assistance and system transfers |
As every business is different, these terms are highly customisable, and in all cases a properly drafted SPA prevents gaps in the transfer and gives both parties a clear and reliable framework to complete the deal.
Let ELP support your business sale / purchase
For both buyers and sellers, having legal assistance helps spot compliance issues that might have been otherwise missed, including licence requirements, contract assignments, or data-related obligations.
It allows all parties to reach a deal that is workable and compliant, and we welcome readers currently exploring a business acquisition or sale to get in touch for a free legal consultation.




