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Conglomerate

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conglomerate investment & finance definition
A company engaged in varied business operations, many of which seem unrelated.

 


Conglomerate
A company engaged in a variety of businesses. Conglomerates were very big in the 1960s and 1970s, but in the 1980s many were dismembered when investors realized the whole was worth less than the sum of the parts.

Conglomerates were popular in the 1960s due to a combination of low interest rates and a repeating bear/bull market, which allowed the conglomerates to buy companies in leveraged buyouts, sometimes at temporarily deflated values.

Conglomerate merger
Definition:
A Merger involving two or more firms that are in unrelated businesses. ...

Conglomerates are corporations that engage in various business pursuits that are completely unrelated in nature.

Conglomerate Articles
Bearish Player Initiates Ratio Put Spread At Staples
By: Andrew Wilkinson
Publish Date: Monday, October 18, 2010
Stocks(s): ERTS, FTO, GE, LNC, SPLS, THC, XCO, YHOO ...

Conglomerate
A corporation that has diversified in operations usually by acquiring enterprises in widely varied industries.
Consensus Rating ...

Conglomerate Merger Merger between two corporations in unrelated business.
Consol A perpetual bond issued by the British government. Sometimes used as a general term for perpetuity.

Conglomerate A company engaged in several different business areas or sectors. A conglomerate is designed to have reduced risk, as its varied business operations are affected differently by economic cycles.

Conglomerate
A conglomerate is a corporation whose multiple business units operate in different, often unrelated, areas.

Conglomerate
A firm engaged in two or more unrelated businesses.
Conglomerate merger
A merger involving two or more firms that are in unrelated businesses.

Conglomerate
Rationale for Stock Picks
All of the above stocks satisfied the requirements of the process, and show strength in the following four areas: ...

Conglomerate (company)
Vertical market
Exclusive dealing
Strategic management
Zaibatsu (the Japanese approach to vertical integration)
Chaebol (the South Korean counterpart to Zaibatsu)
Horizontal integration ...

Industrial Conglomerate: General Electric (GE) Earnings Estimate is $.26/share vs. Actual Earnings of $.36/share the same quarter a year ago.

See GoCurrency World Currencies Page & Currency Converter chaebol Korean term for a conglomerate of many firms clustered around one parent firm....

It doesn't matter if you invest in shares of stock of multi-billion dollar conglomerates or tiny publicly traded retailers, when you buy share of stock, you are purchasing a tiny piece of a company.

The primary motivation for building conglomerates is to diversify earnings so that they go up steadily over time.[citation needed] ...

The recent global economic meltdown unrelentingly shattered mammoth conglomerates, distinguished corporations and illustrious industries. The shockwaves had a minifying effect on a number of businesses shrinking them to mere rubbles.

Congress first passed a law permitting huge financial conglomerates. Then, in 1999, it added the Financial Services Modernization Act.

Berkshire Hathaway - Berkshire Hathaway is a holding company specializing in insurance related companies, but it has a wide array of interests, which make it a conglomerate.

Zaibatsu is a Japanese term that refers to the large family owned conglomerates that controlled much of the Japanese economy prior to World War II during the Edo and Meiji periods.
[MORE]
Commercial Paper ...

More recently, after years of adamant resistance to splitting either of its lofty share classes, goliath insurance-holding conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) decided to initiate a jaw-dropping 50-for-1 split of its B shares in order to help ...

Lending Limit (LLL) Banking regulation used in most countries to limit the amount of exposure that a bank is allowed to have to any one obligor (borrower), either individually or on a consolidated basis in the case of a financial conglomerate or ...

There are five main classes of issuers, representing various sectors that issue corporate bonds: (1) public utilities; (2) transportation companies; (3) industrial corporations; (4) financial services companies; and (5) conglomerates.

A sector refers to a group of securities that are within industries (for example, technology or airlines) or share other characteristics, such as maturity, type, or rating. Sectors include Basic Materials, Capital Goods, Conglomerates, ...

the emergency re-supply effort that had enabled Israel to withstand Egyptian and Syrian forces, the Arab world imposed the 1973 oil embargo against the United States, Western Europe, and Japan. By the early 1970s the great Western oil conglomerates ...

concentration risk According to "Risk Concentrations Principles," which the BIS released in 12/99, risk concentrations in financial conglomerates come in seven categories of exposures, to: individual counterparties, ...

See also: Market, Investment, Stock, Share, Vesting

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