Strategic guidance across the full M&A lifecycle, from due diligence and deal structuring to negotiation and post-closing execution. We help clients complete transactions that advance real business objectives, not just close deals.
Buying or selling a business is one of the most consequential decisions an owner will make. Whether structured as an asset sale or a share sale, a successful transaction depends on clear strategy, informed decision-making, and disciplined execution.
At Shekarian Law PC, we guide clients through the entire M&A process, from early-stage planning and due diligence to negotiation, closing, and post-closing obligations. We focus on helping you understand the deal, manage risk, and structure the transaction to achieve your commercial objectives.
We support a wide range of M&A participants, including:
We provide end-to-end legal support across the deal lifecycle:
| Stage | What Happens | Typical Output |
| 1- Planning | Structure, risk map, timeline | Deal plan & strategy |
| 2- LOI / Term Sheet | Key business terms negotiated | Signed LOI / term sheet |
| 3- Due Diligence | Legal & commercial review | Issues list + remedies |
| 4- Definitive Docs | SPA/APA + schedules | Signed agreements |
| 5- Closing | Funds & documents exchanged | Closing book |
| 6- Post-Closing | Transition + obligations | Compliance + follow-ups |
We negotiate and document key terms that often determine whether a deal is “good” beyond the headline price:
M&A work is typically billed based on the complexity of the transaction, diligence scope, document drafting needs, negotiation intensity, and timeline constraints.
Depending on the deal, we may offer:
We’ll provide a clear engagement scope upfront so you understand what is included and what drives cost.
If you’re buying or selling a business in Canada, we can help you structure the transaction, manage due diligence, negotiate the agreement, and close with confidence.
Or send us your LOI / draft agreement for a structured review.
FAQ
You are not legally required to retain a lawyer to buy or sell a business in Canada. However, M&A transactions involve complex legal, contractual, and risk-allocation issues that can have long-term financial and operational consequences.
An experienced M&A lawyer helps structure the transaction, manage legal risk, conduct due diligence, negotiate key terms, and ensure the deal closes properly with appropriate post-closing protections in place. In practice, most buyers and sellers retain legal counsel to avoid exposure that may not be apparent at the outset.
In an asset sale, the buyer purchases specific assets and, in some cases, assumes selected liabilities of the business. The seller retains the corporation and any liabilities not expressly assumed. This structure can allow buyers to limit risk exposure but may require third-party consents and more extensive post-closing transfers.
In a share sale, the buyer acquires the shares of the corporation itself, thereby taking ownership of all assets and liabilities—known and unknown—of the company. This structure is often simpler operationally but places greater emphasis on due diligence, representations and warranties, and indemnities to manage risk.
The appropriate structure depends on tax considerations, liability exposure, contractual constraints, regulatory approvals, and the parties’ relative negotiating leverage.
A Letter of Intent (LOI) outlines the principal business terms of a proposed transaction and sets the roadmap toward a definitive agreement.
While purchase terms are typically non-binding, certain provisions—such as exclusivity, confidentiality, cost allocation, and governing law—are often legally binding. Careful drafting is required to avoid unintended obligations or disputes over enforceability.
Legal due diligence typically includes a review of corporate records, material contracts, employment matters, intellectual property, litigation, regulatory compliance, real estate interests, privacy considerations, and other areas that affect risk and value.
The scope varies depending on the transaction, but the objective is to identify issues that may affect pricing, structure, deal protections, or post-closing exposure.
It varies. Complexity, consents, financing, and document readiness can change the timeline significantly.
They’re statements about the business (e.g., taxes, contracts, liabilities). If untrue, the buyer may have remedies—so the drafting and disclosures matter.
An earn-out is a pricing mechanism where part of the purchase price is contingent on the business achieving defined post-closing performance targets.
Earn-outs can bridge valuation gaps but often give rise to disputes if performance metrics, control rights, reporting obligations, and dispute-resolution mechanisms are not carefully defined.
A holdback or escrow involves retaining a portion of the purchase price for a defined period after closing to secure specific risks, such as breaches of representations and warranties or unresolved issues.
These mechanisms provide buyers with protection while allowing sellers to demonstrate post-closing compliance.
In many cases, yes. Non-residents can acquire Canadian businesses, subject to potential tax, regulatory, financing, and investment review considerations.
Cross-border transactions require early planning to address these issues and ensure compliance with applicable Canadian laws.
The first step is a strategic assessment of structure, timing, risks, and objectives. A preliminary discussion can clarify whether the deal is best pursued as contemplated and what preparation is required before engaging with counterparties or signing an LOI.
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