Official source · from €4.99
When Mexican companies raise venture capital they usually convert to an S.A.P.I. de C.V. — the investment-promotion corporation from the securities law that legalises shareholder agreements, share classes and transfer restrictions ordinary S.A.s handle poorly. Order the official record for any S.A.P.I. in minutes, from €4.99.
✓ One-time payment · no account · no subscription
The S.A.P.I. exists for companies with sophisticated ownership: multiple share classes, vesting, investor protections. Its appearance on paperwork is a strong hint that founders and funds sit behind the entity. The register record grounds the entity itself — exact legal name, inscription and identifiers — before you rely on anything the pitch materials claim.
Conversions are common: businesses begin as S.A. de C.V. and re-emerge as S.A.P.I. de C.V. after a funding round, so name history across documents can straddle both suffixes.
The official record for the S.A.P.I.: registered name, identifiers and registered details as published by official sources — delivered as structured data plus a branded PDF by email in minutes. One-time payment, from €4.99.
Statutory room for investor mechanics: enforceable shareholder agreements, tag-along and drag-along rights, share buybacks and classes — features imported from securities law while the company stays private. That is why cap-table-heavy companies adopt it.
No — it remains a private company; the form merely borrows flexibility from the securities regime. Meeting one usually means meeting a startup or an investor-backed business.
Its registered identity — denominación ending in "S.A.P.I. de C.V.", registry inscription, identifiers — and registered details as officially published, the base layer under any pitch deck.
companyinfo.me is an independent information service and is not affiliated with any government authority or official register.