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1 One Share Certificate Common Stock A
AVIS Fintech PLC. is offering 100.000.000 shares of Class A and 500.000.000 shares of Class B common stock and the selling stockholders are offering 1 (one) shares of Class A common stock. This is our initial public offering, and no public market currently exists for our shares. The initial public offering price is EUR5.00 per share and additional cross sale discount is applicable as offered at the AVIS Marketplace.
Following this offering, we will have two classes of authorized common stock, Class A common stock and Class B common stock. The rights of the holders of Class A common stock and Class B common stock are identical, except with respect to voting and conversion. Each share of Class A common stock is entitled to ten vote per share. Each share of Class B common stock is entitled to one votes per share and is convertible at any time into one share of Class A common stock (if available).
Our Class A common stock will be quoted on VICTORIA, Luxembourg, NASDAQ and AQUIS under the symbol to be still advised
The Shares will be delivered in a download printable version and accredited in your AVISPay account.
The firm is the general developer of all the AVIS IT technology assembling. AFPLC contracts or subcontracts international IT teams for the creation of the patented AVISPay platform. The firms acquire software products worldwide and develops the AVIS Group server farms worldwide.
The products are: AVIS Bank core bank and the AVIS Marketplace, the corporate management software and the 3D printing management software programs for the AVIS GreenTec printer Center in Cartagena. The recruiting of up to 1000 team members managing and servicing the marketplace users. Onboarding new users and editing constantly the software requirements. Creation of artificial intelligence, the worldwide server farms of AVIS Bank connected to the satellite red and the software developing at the green industrial parks of the group.
Ones the IT teams have reached full functionality of the existing software systems, AVIS Fintech PLC will instruct AVIS Bank for processing the start of trade at the exchanges.
Expected time: Q4 2022
Class A shares are common stocks, as are the vast majority of shares issued by a public company. Common shares are an ownership interest in a company and entitle purchasers to a portion of the profits earned.
Investors in common shares are usually given at least one vote for each share they hold. This entitles the owners to vote at annual meetings, where board members are elected, company decisions are made, and shareholders are allowed to voice their concerns.
Theoretically, a company can create any number of classes of shares of common stock. In reality, the decision is usually made in order to concentrate voting power within a certain group of people.
When more than one class of stock is offered, companies traditionally designate them as Class A and Class B, with Class A carrying more voting rights than Class B shares. Class A shares may offer 10 voting rights per stock held, while class B shares offer only one. It depends on how the company decides to structure its stock.
Setting aside the issue of voting rights, different classes of common stock almost always carry the same equity interest in a company. Therefore, shareholders of all classes have the same rights to share in company profits. That is, they have the right to share in any dividends that are approved by the board of directors.
For most investors, voting clout doesn't matter much as long as they believe those with more clout are making the right decisions. It may begin to matter if they feel the company is going off-course and they don't have the votes to help force a change.
The difference between Class A and Class B stock is vividly demonstrated by the classes of stock issued by Berkshire Hathaway, the company run by legendary investor Warren Buffett.
The company's Class B stock traded at around $280 as of July 2021, while its Class A stock was valued at over $420,000 per share.34
For many years, Buffett refused to allow a stock split while its price rose into the stratosphere. He preferred to concentrate voting power in the hands of relatively few investors. In 1996, he finally decided to create a Class B to attract small investors.5
There's no substantive difference between the two stocks, except that a share of Class B stock has 1/1500th the value of a Class A share and a corresponding fraction of its voting power.
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