Learn how to manage ESOPs, ownership, and compliance across multi-entity corporate structures using EquityList’s unified cap table and put-call workflows.
Table of Contents
Most companies start out simple with a single legal entity and cap table.
But as the business grows, that simplicity rarely lasts. New entities are often added to serve specific needs, such as:
These multi-entity structures make sense operationally and strategically. But they also make equity management more complex.
If these aren't tracked properly, it can lead to confusion during audits, fundraising, or exits.
A multi-entity corporate structure is when a business is made up of two or more separate legal companies or entities.
These entities could be subsidiaries, holding companies, branches, or special-purpose companies that work together under one group. Each entity is legally distinct, with its own ownership, financials, and sometimes different functions or operations but the management could be the same.
Companies use multi-entity structures to:
For example, a company raises capital through a Delaware C-Corp. It has an Indian subsidiary to hire engineers and issue ESOPs locally, and a UAE subsidiary for sales and customer contracts in the Middle East. The parent company owns both subsidiaries, consolidating global ownership while managing local needs separately.
As startups expand globally, several multi-entity setups have emerged as the norm. Below are the most common ones, why they’re used, and how they affect ownership and equity tracking.
This usually has:
The idea here is to:
For example: A SaaS startup raises funds via a Delaware C-Corp, hires engineers in India through an Indian subsidiary, and issues ESOPs from the Indian entity.
This usually has:
The idea here is to:
For example: Two co-founders, Aisha, based in the UAE, and James, based in the UK, decided to launch a fintech startup targeting customers in both the Middle East and Europe.
Aisha incorporates a UAE Free Zone entity (TechBridge FZ-LLC) to handle GCC operations, local licensing, and to take advantage of favorable VAT and corporate tax rules in the region.
James sets up a UK Limited company (TechBridge Ltd) to serve European customers, integrate with local payment systems, and qualify for UK R&D tax incentives.
To unify the business and raise external capital, they jointly set up a Singapore holding company (TechBridge Global Pte Ltd), which owns both the UAE and UK entities.
This usually has:
The idea here is to:
For example: A healthtech company holds patents in Singapore and licenses them to its APAC and EU subsidiaries.
Despite their structural differences, all of these setups introduce a common challenge: cross-entity complexity.
Each entity may also have its own cap table, ESOP pool, board of directors, and regulatory filings.
But from a founder or investor’s perspective, all of these parts are still one company. Managing them in silos doesn’t work. You need a system that presents a clear, unified view of the entire group structure.
A holding company is a parent entity that owns controlling stakes (51%) in one or more other companies, known as subsidiaries. Its main role along with its own operational activities is to own shares, oversee governance, and consolidate ownership.
A subsidiary, on the other hand, is a company that is either wholly or partially owned by the holding company. It operates its own business activities such as sales, engineering, or service delivery, but strategic decisions often align with the holding company’s interests.
Here’s what makes equity messy in multi-entity setups:
Each entity has its own cap table, often maintained separately in Excel or different tools. Tracking ownership across the group means stitching these together manually which becomes painful during a fundraise, audit, or acquisition.
Many companies issue stock options from a services subsidiary like India even if the holding company sits elsewhere. On the other hand, many holding companies issue stock options to subsidiary employees due to easy regulations and tax saving treatment in the home country.
These ESOPs then need to be mapped to value created in the parent entity, leading to phantom options, inter-entity obligations, and confusing repurchase terms.
Without a dedicated tracking system, employees and investors alike lose clarity.
Different jurisdictions interpret rights like liquidation preference or drag-along differently. Worse, these rights don’t always flow cleanly between entities.
For example: an investor holds preferred shares in a Singapore holding company with a drag-along clause. But the Indian operating subsidiary, which employs most of the team, isn’t part of that agreement. If an acquisition offer comes in, the investor’s rights may not apply downstream, leading to delays or renegotiation.
The parent company often owns 100% of its subsidiaries, but not always.
Sometimes subsidiaries are jointly owned with local partners or co-founders. This introduces additional contracts like put-call options that govern how equity can be transferred or exited. These agreements are critical, yet easy to overlook when cap tables are siloed.
When equity records are scattered across spreadsheets and jurisdictions, basic legal hygiene suffers. Inconsistent filings, unapproved grants, or mismatched valuations can slow down due diligence, introduce regulatory exposure, and create friction with local authorities, especially when dealing with foreign capital flows or overseas ESOP holders.
EquityList is designed by keeping in mind the nuances of the real-world and thus is the only cap table and equity management software built with multi-entity structures in mind.
EquityList lets you maintain separate cap tables for each entity but toggle between them from the same dashboard. You can track ownership across the entire corporate structure, including cross-holdings, inter-entity share issuance, and ESOPs and view the consolidated cap table under ‘fully diluted cap table’.
You can issue and manage ESOPs from a services entity (like the India devco) while mapping them to the holding company equity pool. This is especially useful for cross-border teams, dual-entity employment, and tax-friendly ESOP planning.
EquityList lets you document and track inter-entity agreements such as put-call options that grant one entity the right (or obligation) to buy or sell shares at predefined conditions.
These are critical for:
You can store and tag shareholder agreements, board resolutions, and related filings against each entity, ensuring a clean compliance trail and audit readiness across the structure.
Let’s say a company operates across four entities:
Here’s how EquityList simplifies their ownership and equity tracking:
Each entity maintains its own cap table in EquityList. The founder and CFO can toggle between all four from a single dashboard, while also seeing a consolidated "fully diluted cap table" that reflects the group-wide ownership structure, including inter-entity shareholding.
Engineers in India receive ESOPs from Acme Solutions Pvt Ltd. With EquityList, those ESOPs are tracked against the equity pool of the parent holding company (Acme Holdings Pte Ltd), making it easy to map employee ownership to actual exit value.
To align investor exits, the company sets up a put-call agreement: the holding company commits to buying back ESOP shares from the Indian devco during a liquidity event. EquityList lets the legal and finance teams upload, tag, and track these rights alongside the cap table, reducing deal friction.
Each entity’s shareholder agreements, board resolutions, ESOP grant letters, and filings are stored and organized in EquityList’s document vault. This makes investor due diligence faster and reduces regulatory risk.
As your company scales across borders and entities, your equity story becomes harder to tell, but even more important to get right. Investors want clarity. Employees want transparency. You want control.
That’s where multi-entity support and put-call workflows in EquityList make the difference, not just in keeping your cap tables tidy, but in keeping your company investable.
Want to see how this works for your structure? Book a demo
Disclaimer
The information provided by E-List Technologies Pvt. Ltd. ("EquityList") is for informational purposes only and should not be considered as an endorsement or recommendation for any investment, product, or service. This communication does not constitute an offer, solicitation, or advice of any kind. Any products, or services referenced will only be undertaken pursuant to formal offering materials, agreements, or letters of intent provided by EquityList, containing full details of the risks, fees, minimum investments, and other terms associated with such transactions. Please note that these terms may change without prior notice.EquityList does not offer legal, financial, taxation or professional advice. Decisions or actions affecting your business or interests should be made after consulting with a qualified professional advisor. EquityList assumes no responsibility for reliance on the information/services provided by us.
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