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hostile leveraged buyout

A buyout of a company against the wishes or without the direct cooperation of that company, in which the capital for the buyout is provided by bonds and other borrowed capital. In some hostile leveraged buyouts, the purchasing company uses the assets of the target company as collateral to borrow the money to acquire the target company.

Related information about hostile leveraged buyout:
  1. Hostile Leveraged Buyout - Financial Dictionary - The Free Dictionary
    The acquisition of a publicly-traded company by a person or group not favored by current management, where the acquisition is financed with debt. Often, the ...
     
  2. Hostile possession - The Free Dictionary
    hostile leveraged buyout · Hostile Leveraged Buyouts · Hostile Litho-Density Tool · Hostile Natural Gamma Ray · hostile person. Hostile possession. Hostile Sub- ...
     
  3. What is hostile leveraged buyout? definition and meaning
    Definition of hostile leveraged buyout: A buyout of a company against the wishes or without the direct cooperation of that company, in which the capital for the ...
     
  4. hostile leveraged buyout - Business Definition
    hostile leveraged buyout definition: The purchase of a firm, against the wishes of the acquired firm's managers, in which a small group of investors finances the ...
     
  5. Examples of Leveraged Buyouts (LBO's) of Corporations
    Tthe hostile LBO of Federated Department Stores became the target of a hostile leveraged buyout by Robert Campeau, a Canadian financier. Robert Campeau ...
     
  6. Federated Department Stores (Leveraged Buyout Debacle)
    The hostile Leveraged Buyouts of Federated Department Stores became the target of a hostile leveraged buyout by Robert Campeau, a Canadian financier.
     
  7. Where are they now? | 6 | FORTUNE
    "I'm the only woman who has ever done a hostile leveraged buyout," says Linda Wachner, still swaggering 21 years after acquiring apparel company Warnaco.
     
  8. Building on Success - AB Freeman School of Business
    chased Rexnord in a hostile leveraged buyout. To pay for his acquisition, Steiner began selling off bits and pieces of Rexnord. One of those pieces was TANO.