Capabilities

What RORO Holdings Inc. can do under Delaware law

The holding company is structured to own assets, control group strategy, raise capital, and enter high-level partnerships while operating entities handle day-to-day execution.

Own Subsidiaries and Equity Interests

Hold full or partial membership in RORO Technology LLC, African companies, joint ventures, IP subsidiaries, and strategic minority investments including SAFEs, convertible notes, and preferred shares.

Strategic Partnership Agreements

Serve as the contracting party for TSAs, joint venture agreements, MOUs, market-entry agreements, revenue-share deals, and government or institutional partnership frameworks.

Own Intellectual Property

Centralize software IP, trademarks, domain names, product designs, proprietary processes, data rights, and platform licensing rights across healthtech, fintech, and AI ventures.

License IP to Operating Companies

License technology, trademarks, and platform rights to RORO Technology LLC with documented, arm's-length pricing and royalty structures.

Raise Institutional Capital

Issue common and preferred stock, convertible notes, SAFEs, warrants, stock options, and restricted stock through a familiar Delaware corporate structure.

Hold Cash, Investments, and Reserves

Maintain strategic reserves, investment capital, financing proceeds, treasury assets, and intercompany receivables with proper documentation.

Fund Subsidiaries and Portfolio Companies

Provide equity contributions, intercompany loans, convertible loans, project financing, guarantees, and working capital facilities.

Own Foreign Subsidiaries and JV Interests

Hold shares in foreign companies and participate in local subsidiaries across African markets with appropriate tax and compliance planning.

Centralize Governance and Control

Appoint officers, approve major transactions, control voting rights, set group compliance policies, and manage brand and strategy at the parent level.

Acquire Companies and Assets

Acquire technology companies, operating businesses, software platforms, licenses, data assets, and equity in strategic partners using cash, stock, or notes.

Enter Service and Transition Agreements

Sign technology services and transition services agreements as parent sponsor, guarantor, or IP owner while operating entities deliver day-to-day services.

Receive Dividends, Royalties, and Returns

Collect dividends, royalties, interest, management fees, advisory fees, distributions, and capital gains from subsidiaries and portfolio investments.

Provide Management and Advisory Services

Deliver strategic planning, capital allocation, legal oversight, corporate development, investor relations, M&A, and partnership structuring.

Maintain Cap Table and Investor Structure

Manage founder shares, investor preferred stock, option pools, advisor equity, vesting schedules, board rights, and exit provisions.

Protect Assets from Operating Risk

Separate valuable IP, cash, equity, and strategic agreements from operating liabilities through disciplined corporate formalities.

Best Practices

What the holding company should not do

Corporate formalities matter. Sloppy intercompany practices can create liability, tax, accounting, and investor due diligence problems.

Paying operating expenses without documentation

Mixing bank accounts between entities

Signing every vendor contract at the parent level

Employing all staff through the holding company

Moving money between entities without agreements

Using RORO entity names interchangeably in contracts