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Word: buyout (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...company's production facilities? The government announced the nationalization plan five years ago. So far, it has acquired only 60% of Aramco's $2 billion in refineries, pipelines and ports. Has Aramco persuaded the Saudis to go slow, since a full buyout would burden the four corporate shareholders with enormous U.S. capital gains taxes? Nonsense, say Saudi officials. They insist that the final take-over is imminent and would have no effect on the company's operations beause Aramco would continue to run them for a fee. But skeptics suggest that the takeover might already have been...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Aramco's Stormy Petrol | 12/24/1979 | See Source »

...Communications, the No. 2 MSO, with nearly 1 million subscribers, has been growing continuously since Rifkin put it together in 1968. During the last fiscal year, it increased revenues 34%, to $71 million, and profit 65%, to $10 million. At the end of 1978, Time Inc. completed a buyout of A.T.C. for a total price of $179.6 million. Among other things the acquisition added to A.T.C. the 100,000 subscribers of Manhattan Cable, which Time Inc. had bought earlier. Unlike Teleprompter, which is concentrating largely on adding subscribers in areas where it already operates, A.T.C. is eagerly bidding...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Cable TV: The Lure of Diversity | 5/7/1979 | See Source »

...North American company by a British or partly British firm so far this year; the British takeovers now amount to an aggregate investment of $1 billion. Such takeovers have become easier because the falling value of the dollar enables a British firm to put up fewer pounds for a buyout. Unilever, which had 1976 revenues of $14.8 billion, dwarfs National Starch, which posted 1976 sales of $339 million. But National Starch's industrial markets complement Unilever's lines of household products, which include Lifebuoy and Wisk, Pepsodent toothpaste and Lipton tea, and would make Unilever a little less...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Takeovers | 12/26/1977 | See Source »

...based executives of the threatened companies maintained sphinxlike silence about the demand, but other oilmen in Tripoli believe that the firms did submit vaguely worded takeover proposals before the deadline. Nervous Americans, faced with the peculiar task of proposing terms for their own buyout, complained privately that they did not know exactly what Gaddafi meant by "100% control." At minimum, Gaddafi might settle for part ownership of their assets and the appointment of Libyan nationals as chief executives. At the extreme, he will push for complete nationalization...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: OIL: Libya's 100-Percenter | 5/28/1973 | See Source »

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