0 of 3 checked
Parties
Confirm the company is named by its full legal name. The company is the issuer of the securities, so a wrong or incomplete name can put the share sale, representations, approvals, and closing obligations on the wrong entity.
Check that each investor is identified by name. The purchaser of record should be clear enough to match share issuance, payment duties, and investor-specific rights to the correct party.
Look for a schedule of purchasers, either attached to the agreement or incorporated clearly by reference. In a multi-investor financing, that schedule is the allocation record for each investor's share amount, purchase amount, and closing obligation.
0 of 1 checked
Securities
Confirm the agreement states the series designation for the preferred stock being sold. The series name ties the purchase to a defined class of securities and to the rights, preferences, and privileges in the charter documents.
0 of 2 checked
Purchase Price
Verify that the agreement states the purchase price per share. This is a core economic term; without it, the consideration for the securities is not definite.
Check whether the agreement states the par value per share. Including it can help align the purchase mechanics with the company's charter and capitalization records, especially when the reviewer is reconciling the agreement against corporate approvals.
0 of 1 checked
Closing
Confirm the agreement explains whether the financing has one closing or allows additional closings. The closing structure controls when purchase obligations mature and whether later purchasers can join the same financing process.
0 of 1 checked
Governing Law and Dispute Resolution
Check whether the agreement chooses a dispute-resolution path, such as court litigation or arbitration. A clear choice reduces procedural uncertainty if the company and investors later disagree about the financing.