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Ask HN: Question about “preferred shares” vs. “super voting shares”

2 pointsby valachioover 2 years ago
I&#x27;m raising capital for a startup for the first time.<p>At my startup we currently have 2 classes of shares. Class A is a &quot;super voting&quot; share with 10 votes and Class B is a common share with 1 vote. Pretty standard nowadays.<p>I understand VCs want to buy &quot;preferred&quot; stock with liquidation preferences. How will that work into our dual-class stock system? Will we need to create a Class C share for VCs for the preferred stock? Or is it a special type of stock which does not require a new class of shares to be implemented?<p>Also, some articles I read say that preferred shares have no voting rights, is that right? Does that mean VCs purchase shares with liquidation preference but with 0 voting power?

2 comments

Animatsover 2 years ago
&gt; At my startup we currently have 2 classes of shares. Class A is a &quot;super voting&quot; share with 10 votes and Class B is a common share with 1 vote. Pretty standard nowadays.<p>That only works if your CEO is a superhero. Just because Ford, Google, and Facebook did it does not mean you can.<p>There was a time when the NYSE wouldn&#x27;t list a stock with more than one kind of share, but they caved on that some years ago due to competition from NASDAQ.
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orbzover 2 years ago
My understanding is that each series preferred shares are their own class. It is not uncommon to have many of these after several rounds of funding.<p>Generally they do not have voting rights, but we’ll have several provisions in the round financing docs that will give them protections (pro-rata, veto, etc). There are also provisions on how and when these preferred shares convert to common shares.