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Senior-executive exits: managing the legal, regulatory and reputational risk in parallel.

A senior departure is never just an HR matter — regulators, the market and the board are all watching the same exit at the same time.

OBA OLUFON & CO. · Employment benchJanuary 20268 min read
Two Nigerian office employees at adjacent workstations.

When a senior executive departs — whether by resignation, negotiated exit or termination — the legal file, the regulatory disclosure obligations, and the public narrative move on three separate but overlapping tracks. Treating them sequentially is how a manageable exit becomes a public and legal problem.

Track one: the contract

Notice periods, restrictive covenants, deferred compensation and equity vesting all need to be resolved before any public statement, not after. A negotiated position agreed with counsel gives the company a defensible position if the executive later disputes the terms.

Track two: the regulator

For regulated entities — banks, insurers, listed companies — a senior departure often triggers a disclosure obligation to CBN, SEC or NGX within a fixed window. Missing that window creates a second, independent compliance problem layered on top of the exit itself.

The company that controls the sequencing controls the narrative. The company that reacts to each track separately loses control of all three.

Track three: the market

A coordinated statement — agreed with the departing executive wherever possible — closes speculation quickly. An exit handled purely as a legal matter, with the market finding out through rumour, tends to cost more in reputation than the severance itself.

This note is general commentary on Nigerian legal practice and does not constitute legal advice or create a lawyer–client relationship. Outcomes depend on the specific facts and the applicable law at the time. For advice on a particular matter, speak with the firm.

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