How To Raise Capital With A Stock Purchase Agreement
Posted by Wanderson12 in FinanceA stock purchase agreement is an agreement entered into by a seller and a purchaser on a fixed date in order to transfer stocks held by the former to the latter. It should be dated and signed in the presence of witnesses. The name of the corporation of which the stock is being sold and which has a market value should be specified in the agreement. In addition, there is to be agreement as to the intention of the purchaser to buy the stock for a mutually arrived at price governed by covenants and agreements as arrived at within contract.
There must be agreement as to the terms and conditions which are contained within the stock purchase agreement, which at the close of the transaction means that the seller will transfer and deliver to the purchaser all certificates representative of the stock sold and that the purchaser shall pay the mutually agreed price as consideration for the stock being bought. This means that the certificates of the stock being sold shall be duly endorsed for transferring the stock or that stock transfer powers will be duly executed in blank, and in either case the signatures of all the parties will be duly given along with any transfer tax stamps, the cost of which will be borne by the seller.
And, in addition, the place, time and date of the closing of the transaction will be specified by the parties to the agreement. The full consideration as well as the mode of payment will be specified in the agreement.
Furthermore, the seller will warrant that the corporation is of impeccable standing, in valid existence and is properly organized under the laws of the state and has the corporate right to continue with the business to which it is ascribed. Besides this, the seller should be the legal owner of the stocks being sold and that the seller is not party to any third party being owner of the said stock. The seller warrants that no act, either of commission or omission, shall render the agreement open to a valid claim against it for payments such as brokerage commissions, finder











