HAQQ

Series B Secondary via Nominee SPV: The Legal Architecture

By Stephane Boghossian · · 18 min read · guides

A real Series B secondary through a nominee SPV: preference stacks, ROFR timing, warranty survival gaps and the five places deals break in diligence.

Series B Is Where Architecture Begins

Most founders optimize valuation.

Institutional investors optimize enforceability.

Seed is narrative risk. Series A is traction risk. Series B is structural risk.

In this case, an angel syndicate participated in a Series B secondary transaction through a UK/EU-regulated platform using:

  • Preferred stock framework
  • Secondary stock transfers
  • Nominee/SPV structure
  • Syndicate waterfall
  • Platform compliance layer

Every layer was structured, cross-mapped, and stress-tested using HAQQ Legal AI.

What follows is not theory.

It is the actual legal architecture required to close a Series B secondary cleanly.

The Four-Layer Deal Architecture

Below is how the transaction was structured.

Documents do not exist independently.

They collide.

Where Series B Deals Actually Break

This is what surfaces during diligence.

1. Liquidation Preference Stack Collisions

Example:

  • Series A: 1x non-participating
  • Series B: 1x participating, senior
  • Exit at $120M

If Series B invested $40M:

  • Series B takes $40M preference first
  • Remaining $80M distributed pro rata
  • Participation layer reduces common further
  • SPV carry (20%) applied on angel distributions

If founders cannot clearly model:

Company Exit → Preference Stack → Participation → SPV Carry → Net Angel Payout

Investors assume immaturity.

HAQQ simulates multi-round waterfall outcomes instantly.

2. ROFR & Secondary Timing Failures

Secondary transactions trigger:

  • Notice to existing shareholders
  • ROFR windows
  • Co-sale rights
  • Consent thresholds

If notice procedures were not properly followed historically, the transfer becomes voidable.

Founders often discover this mid-round.

3. Representation & Warranty Survival Gaps

Secondary sellers represent:

  • Clean title
  • No encumbrances
  • Authority to transfer
  • No litigation encumbrances

But:

  • Prior financing reps may survive 5 years
  • Secondary seller reps may survive 2

That creates liability asymmetry.

HAQQ maps survival periods across rounds and flags exposure mismatches.

4. Nominee Voting Ambiguity

When angels invest via SPV:

Cap table shows one entity. But who actually controls:

  • Exit vote?
  • Down round approval?
  • Major investor consent?

If SPV operating terms conflict with the Voting Agreement at company level, governance fractures.

HAQQ models the governance chain:

Company → Nominee → SPV → Manager → Beneficial Investors

Before closing.

5. Definition Drift Across Rounds

"Qualified Financing." "Major Investor." "Deemed Liquidation Event."

If defined differently across historical documents, interpretation risk emerges.

Disputes begin in definitions.

What Actually Breaks in Real Diligence

Here's what institutional investors flag:

  • Cap table doesn't reconcile to legal agreements
  • Consent thresholds conflict across documents
  • ROFR notices were never properly documented
  • Protective provisions misaligned across classes
  • Secondary pricing creates signaling distortion
  • SPV carry structure misaligned with long-term incentives
  • Defined terms reused inconsistently

Founders rarely see these issues until investors do.

Why This Matters for Valuation

Clean structure reduces diligence friction.

Reduced friction increases investor confidence.

Confidence increases pricing leverage.

Pricing leverage protects founder ownership.

Governance hygiene is not administrative. It is strategic.

The Series B Readiness Audit

Before raising, you should answer in under 60 seconds:

  • What is your full liquidation preference stack order?
  • Who controls nominee voting authority?
  • How long do seller representations survive?
  • What consent threshold approves an exit?
  • What happens in a down round scenario?
  • Have ROFR procedures been historically compliant?

What HAQQ Actually Does Differently

Generic AI drafts documents.

Structured legal AI models their interaction.

HAQQ:

  • Generates jurisdiction-aware financing templates
  • Builds a document dependency graph
  • Maps cross-agreement obligations
  • Simulates exit waterfall scenarios
  • Flags consent threshold conflicts
  • Harmonizes defined terms across rounds
  • Stress-tests governance alignment
  • Aligns SPV operating terms with company-level rights
  • Embeds UK/EU compliance logic automatically

It does not just draft.

It reasons structurally.

The Real Insight

Series B is not a financing event.

It is a systems audit.

Optimistic founders focus on valuation.

Sophisticated investors focus on enforceability.

Before investors audit your company, audit your structure.

If you are preparing for a Series B — especially involving secondary liquidity, nominee structures, or syndicate participation —

FAQ

Where do Series B secondary deals break in diligence?

The article identifies five failure points: liquidation preference stack collisions, ROFR and secondary timing failures, representation & warranty survival gaps, nominee voting ambiguity, and definition drift across rounds.

What makes a secondary share transfer voidable?

If ROFR notice procedures were not properly followed historically, the transfer becomes voidable — and per the article, founders often discover this mid-round.

Who controls shares held through a nominee SPV?

The cap table shows one entity, but control runs through the chain Company → Nominee → SPV → Manager → Beneficial Investors. If SPV operating terms conflict with the company-level Voting Agreement, governance fractures.

Does legal structure affect Series B valuation?

Yes — the article's chain: clean structure reduces diligence friction, friction reduction increases investor confidence, confidence increases pricing leverage, and pricing leverage protects founder ownership. 'Governance hygiene is not administrative. It is strategic.'

← All HAQQ articles