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  2. Recovery of funds from the Madoff investment scandal

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recovery_of_funds_from_the...

    Ruth Madoff's combined assets with her husband had a net worth of between $823 million and $826 million.She had $92.6 million in assets listed in her own name: [9] the $7 million penthouse on Manhattan's Upper East Side; an $11 million mansion in Palm Beach, Florida; a three-bedroom apartment in Cap d'Antibes on the French Riviera valued at $1.5 million; $45 million in municipal bonds and $17 ...

  3. Dividend Recaps: How Private Equity Is Sucking the Life Out ...

    www.aol.com/news/2012-12-15-dividend-recaps-how...

    Rather, they were plotting a "dividend recap." After taking BJ's private, LG and CVC ordered the company to pay them a $643 million dividend -- equal to the entire cash outlay they'd made in the ...

  4. Fraudulent conveyance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraudulent_conveyance

    The UFTA and the Bankruptcy Code both provide that a transfer made by a debtor is fraudulent as to a creditor if the debtor made the transfer with the "actual intention to hinder, delay or defraud" any creditor of the debtor. There are two kinds of fraudulent transfer. The archetypal example is the intentional fraudulent transfer.

  5. Dividend recapitalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dividend_recapitalization

    A dividend recapitalization (often referred to as a dividend recap) in finance is a type of leveraged recapitalization in which a payment is made to shareholders. As opposed to a typical dividend which is paid regularly from the company's earnings, a dividend recapitalization occurs when a company raises debt —e.g. by issuing bonds to fund ...

  6. An Investor's Guide to Dividend Recaps - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/investors-guide-dividend-recaps...

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  7. Leveraged buyout - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leveraged_buyout

    The outcome of litigation attacking a leveraged buyout as a fraudulent transfer will generally turn on the financial condition of the target at the time of the transaction – that is, whether the risk of failure was substantial and known at the time of the LBO, or whether subsequent unforeseeable events led to the failure.

  8. Twyne's Case - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twyne's_Case

    Twyne's case (1601) 76 ER 809; 3 Co. Rep. 80b is a UK insolvency law case, concerning a fraudulent conveyance.Representative of earlier English law, it was considered that any transfer of property from a debtor to a creditor, after which the debtor remained in possession of that property, was a fraudulent act intended to defraud creditors. [1]

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