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  2. Corporate spin-off - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_spin-off

    Spin-offs occur when the equity owners of the parent company receive equity stakes in the newly spun off company. [6] For example, when Agilent Technologies was spun off from Hewlett-Packard (HP) in 1999, the stockholders of HP received Agilent stock. A company not considered a spin-off in the SEC's definition (but considered by the SEC as a ...

  3. List of companies involved in quantum computing or ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_companies_involved...

    Quantum-resistance testing of cryptography in laboratory environments. EPFL, Ruhr-Universität Bochum spin-off (cryptanalyses). UAS Western Switzerland (performance tests) and several leading Spanish universities (European projects). Fribourg, Switzerland QRDLab: June 30, 2020: Computing, Consulting, Education Superconducting: University of ...

  4. List of largest corporate spin-offs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_corporate...

    Spin-off entity Transaction value (in billions USD) Inflation adjusted (in billions 2022 USD) Ref 1 2024 General Electric Company: GE Aerospace, GE Vernova, GE Healthcare: 191 191 [1] 2 2008 Altria Group: Philip Morris International: 108 141 [2] [3] 3 2000 BCE: Nortel: 60 97 [3] 4 2013 Abbott Laboratories: AbbVie: 56 67 [3] 5 2015 eBay: PayPal ...

  5. List of companies founded by Stanford University alumni

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_companies_founded...

    However, founders of a company which later dissolved into several successor companies are not counted as founders of those successor companies; this same rule applies to spin-off companies. Finally, a defunct company is a company that stopped functioning completely (e.g., bankrupt) without dissolving, merging or being acquired.

  6. Research spin-off - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Research_spin-off

    A research spin-off is a company that falls into at least one of the four following categories: [1] Companies that have an Equity investment from a national library or university; Companies that license technology from a public research institute or university; Companies that consider a university or public sector employee to have been a founder

  7. Reverse takeover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_takeover

    A reverse takeover (RTO), reverse merger, or reverse IPO is the acquisition of a public company by a private company so that the private company can bypass the lengthy and complex process of going public. [1] Sometimes, conversely, the public company is bought by the private company through an asset swap and share issue. [2]

  8. Comcast announces plan to spin off TV networks including ...

    www.aol.com/finance/comcast-announces-plan-spin...

    Comcast said in late October that it had begun to explore spinning off its cable TV networks into a separate business, sending the stock up more than 3% the same day, Yahoo Finance’s Alexandra ...

  9. University spin-off - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_spin-off

    University spin-offs (also known as university spin-outs) [1] [2] are companies that transform technological inventions developed from university research that are likely to remain unexploited otherwise. [3] They are a subcategory of research spin-offs. Prominent examples of university spin-offs are Genentech, Crucell, Lycos and Plastic Logic.