A holding company centralizes control and can isolate certain risks—when intercompany pricing, cash pooling, and board reserved matters are real. Read it with FLPs, trusts, modular systems, and boundary critique so the graph matches operations.
1. HoldCo as Governance
A holding company is a parent shell: it can centralize control, consolidate reporting, and clarify interfaces between operating subsidiaries—if minutes, pricing, and cash policies are real. It is not magic liability pixie dust.
Design boundaries with boundary critique and modular systems so one subsidiary failure does not become a silent family bailout.
"A chart with twelve boxes and one bank account is not modular—it is denial with filing fees."
2. Intercompany Cash and Fees
Management fees, loans, and IP licenses must be documented and arm's-length. Lenders and auditors read patterns; make the pattern boring. Couple this with entropy budgeting for legal, tax, and banking overhead.
3. M&A and Integration
Earnouts, escrows, and goodwill tracking belong in the same system as covenant headroom. Path dependence warning: early guarantee habits lock the group into lender behavior for years.
Guarantees, large capex, equity issuance—only the parent board, in writing.
Template MSAs and loan docs with pricing methodology and renewal dates.
Cash sweeps, minimum subsidiary cash, dual-control wires—publish thresholds.
4. Family and Conflict
Substance beats theater: if the HoldCo is where cousins negotiate power, publish decision rights before money negotiates for them. Mental models help heirs inherit frameworks, not fog.
5. Exit Optionality
Clean subsidiary books and data rooms are a strategy: buyers pay for clarity. First principles—what job must the shell do Tuesday, not just on signing day?
Build the lattice, not the legend.
Return to the Reading hub for essays, tools, and the rest of the 100-topic map.
See also in Strata Atlas: The Infinite Banking Concept Using whole life in · Capital Gains Tax Architecture How to time exits · Self-Directed IRAs Taking structural control of · Asset Location The structural difference between · The Private Family Office When and how to build