Parent company guarantee
A guarantee by a parent company for the contractual obligations of its subsidiary.
Definici贸n
A parent company guarantee is a commitment by a group parent to stand behind the performance or payment obligations of a subsidiary that contracts with a counterparty. It gives the beneficiary recourse to a stronger balance sheet where the contracting entity is thinly capitalised. The scope, cap, duration and whether it is a primary or secondary obligation should be drafted precisely.
Ejemplo
A client demands a parent company guarantee before contracting with a newly incorporated project subsidiary.
Por qu茅 es un riesgo para la empresa
A parent company guarantee is only as strong as the parent's financial position at the time of enforcement, not at signing. Group restructurings, dividend repatriations or a deteriorating parent balance sheet can render the guarantee worthless precisely when it is needed. If the guarantee is a secondary obligation, the creditor must first exhaust remedies against the subsidiary, which adds delay and cost to recovery.
C贸mo gestionarlo
- Obtain the guarantee from the ultimate beneficial parent, not an intermediate holding company that may itself be thinly capitalised.
- Specify whether the guarantee is primary (payable on demand without first pursuing the subsidiary) or secondary (payable only after default by the subsidiary).
- Set the scope of the guarantee to match the underlying contract obligations exactly, including liability caps, and update it if the contract is amended.
- Include a change-of-control provision: if the parent is acquired or ceases to own the subsidiary, the beneficiary should have the right to request a replacement security.
- Monitor the parent's financial health annually and request additional security if creditworthiness declines materially.
Referencias legales
Salvo indicaci贸n en contrario, las referencias remiten al derecho neerland茅s (Burgerlijk Wetboek, el C贸digo Civil neerland茅s); los instrumentos de la UE como el RGPD se aplican en toda la UE. Se trata de informaci贸n general, no de asesoramiento legal. Otras jurisdicciones tratan estos conceptos de forma distinta. Verifique el texto vigente y su situaci贸n con un abogado cualificado.
Preguntas frecuentes
Preguntas comunes sobre este t茅rmino.