The former lawyers for the insolvent companies of a New Brunswick potato farmer jailed in Lebanon have had their fees slashed by a judge who found they would
bankrupt the companies if they were paid in full.
Not exact matches
If a
company doesn't pay, we just let it go
bankrupt.»
«
If the
company went
bankrupt, they were afraid I wouldn't have any financial assets of my own for them to go after.»
In other words,
if the
company is faltering or on the verge of going
bankrupt, the venture debt investors have a better chance of getting their money out before the investment turns to zero.
What
if you had purchased
companies such as WebVan, the
bankrupt web grocer from the dot - com era that left investors with catastrophic losses?
Huge national banks shuttered,
bankrupt, corporations that employed thousands wiped out, TBTF reinsurers bailed out with taxpayer money, amazingly flawed misallocation of resources financing pipedream «Green Energy»
companies with no product, and no market even
if they did have a product, etc..
This idea revolutionized the world because it was fresh and very smart,
if you own a stock below its intrinsic value and the
company goes
bankrupt, then you will get in return more than what you paid for, so,
if the
company goes
bankrupt, you make money and
if the
company does well, then you keep making money.
If you have all your money in 2
companies and one of them goes
bankrupt, you've just lost a huge chunk of your portfolio.
Once you own it, it's yours; even
if the
company goes
bankrupt, your gold is recorded independently of their books.
In addition to that, you should also sell off stocks that you intended to hold
if you know that the
company will go
bankrupt,
if the
company does something that goes against your personal beliefs system or
if the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) is indicted of accounting problems or theft.
Even
if one of these
companies went
bankrupt each year (something I find highly, highly unlikely), the earnings per share growth from the other firms should, in aggregate, still allow you to become richer than you were at the beginning of the previous year.
If you owned or bought shares of Halcon Resources at the start of 2016, you got slaughtered, as the
company went
bankrupt, emerging in a «prepackaged» plan that it negotiated with its debt holders.
The effect often leaves a
bankrupt shell of a
company, or at least enables corporate raiders to threaten employees with bankruptcy that would wipe out their pension funds or employee stock ownership plans
if they do not agree to replace defined benefit pensions with riskier contribution schemes.
What would happen
if the
company were to go
bankrupt?
If the
company offering the ETN goes
bankrupt, holders of the ETN become creditors of the firm.
They can cut risk further with equally weighted stock funds so that no one big
company in an index can do much harm
if it flops in price or goes
bankrupt.
Also, they (and not you) are the owner of content that you upload, so
if the
company goes
bankrupt or changes its policies, you could be hosed.
If they closed, that huge decommissioning liability would have to be shown on the nuclear generator's balance sheet — figures that would soon overtake the net worth of the
company, thus making it technically
bankrupt.
Furthermore, with the average school trip representing an investment of over # 20,000, what happens
if the
company goes
bankrupt?
This
company has continued to make super shabby products and I would not be surprised
if they want
bankrupt.
I mean,
if my rights were tied up in a
company that will go
bankrupt, that would be another bunch of headaches to deal with in just getting the rights returned.
If he did that for Future's 60 + titles, he would «
bankrupt the
company», Future's Goldsmith said.
Of course,
if the major publishing
companies go
bankrupt, it won't be the end of the world.
The only danger you run into is
if the
company or government goes
bankrupt and therefore is unable to make good on the payment.
Ontario is the only province to insure the pensions of
bankrupt companies through its Pension Benefits Guarantee Fund (PBGF), which backstops the first $ 1,000 per month in pension benefits per plan member
if a
company goes bust
If you have a DB plan, it's probably not necessary, unless you think your
company is likely to go
bankrupt.
However,
if your
company goes
bankrupt while the plan is underfunded — a situation that Nortel workers faced — you might get less than expected.
Realistically, what all this means is that insurance
companies never go
bankrupt;
if they do badly, they are typically bought up by a competitor long before things get that bad.
And
if a
company or government entity goes
bankrupt, you also face the possibility of losing money or receiving reduced profits.
If this is not the case, for argument sake, let's say that the $ 2,000 dollars I lost was due to a
company that I owned shares in going
bankrupt; does this mean that I have lost the $ 2,000 contribution room forever?
The risk with bonds is that
if the
company or government that issues the bond goes
bankrupt or runs into financial problems, then the bond holder may not get their money back.
Even
if the fund - management
company goes
bankrupt, its creditors can't touch the money in the mutual fund, which is held in a separate trust for investors.
If existing lenders objected to being primed, it is possible that the
company would then go
bankrupt or cease operations, and any existing lenders or creditors could be unpaid.
The important thing is that
if your pension plan is 15 % to 20 % underfunded and the
company goes
bankrupt, you haven't lost all your pension,» FitzGerald says.
Q24: Am I eligible for COBRA
if my
company closed or went
bankrupt and there is no health plan?
We are the first to say that's not a smart plan, because
if your
company goes
bankrupt, you are out of a job and your investments are zero.
But
if the
company whose bond you have didn't go
bankrupt, you can still collect your interest and you will still get your full principal at maturity date.
If the house is worth about what remains owing on the mortgage, the trustee will not take your house if you go bankrupt, and generally the mortgage company will allow you to keep making your monthly mortgage payment
If the house is worth about what remains owing on the mortgage, the trustee will not take your house
if you go bankrupt, and generally the mortgage company will allow you to keep making your monthly mortgage payment
if you go
bankrupt, and generally the mortgage
company will allow you to keep making your monthly mortgage payments.
That could ultimately mean cutting the dividend or eliminating it altogether, or worse (like losing your principal investment
if the
company goes
bankrupt).
Why it's important: This ratio shows what each share would receive
if the
company were completely liquidated (
bankrupt).
What
if the
company goes
bankrupt?
They can cut risk further with equally weighted stock funds so that no one big
company in an index can do much harm
if it flops in price or goes
bankrupt.
GM wants the bond holders to take less than they likely would
if the
company went
bankrupt and the government is looming with a silent threat that the bond holders might not get treated like they would in a normal bankruptcy.
Won't the fuel delivery
company go
bankrupt if they have to sell the oil so «cheap».
For example,
if a
company goes
bankrupt, or its earnings power drops permanently, then shareholder value will also become permanently diminished.
Remember,
if you own 33
companies that make up 3.3 % of your portfolio's income each, you could have two
companies go completely
bankrupt provided the dividend growth rate for the rest of your portfolio is 7 %... and you would still be richer than you were the previous year.
If the
company goes
bankrupt, your creditors will ask for the loan to be repaid.
I can't say
if there is anything specific that makes lending illegal, but
if your
company goes
bankrupt, you might end up in trouble.
Now
if things are worse, your
company goes
bankrupt, and the person can not pay back the money, then you could get into real trouble.
They want to know that the owner has committed his personal funds to the business and that he has something to lose
if the
company goes
bankrupt.