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  2. Liquidity risk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquidity_risk

    However, if one party cannot find another party interested in trading the asset, this can potentially be only a problem of the market participants with finding each other. [3] This is why liquidity risk is usually found to be higher in emerging markets or low-volume markets. Liquidity risk is financial risk due to uncertain liquidity.

  3. Resolution Trust Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resolution_Trust_Corporation

    RTC literature in the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation history exhibit. The Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) was a U.S. government-owned asset management company first run by Lewis William Seidman and charged with liquidating assets, primarily real estate-related assets such as mortgage loans, that had been assets of savings and loan associations (S&Ls) declared insolvent by the Office ...

  4. Asset and liability management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asset_and_liability_management

    Its scope, though, includes the allocation and management of assets, equity, interest rate and credit risk management including risk overlays, and the calibration of company-wide tools within these risk frameworks for optimisation and management in the local regulatory and capital environment. Often an ALM approach passively matches assets ...

  5. Asset stripping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asset_stripping

    Asset stripping refers to selling off a company's assets to improve returns for equity investors, often a financial investor, a "corporate raider", who takes over another company and then auctions off the acquired company's assets. [1] The term is generally used in a pejorative sense as such activity is not considered helpful to the company.

  6. Equity (finance) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equity_(finance)

    Businesses summarize their equity in a financial statement known as the balance sheet (or statement of net position) which shows the total assets, the specific equity balances, and the total liabilities and equity (or deficit). Various types of equity can appear on a balance sheet, depending on the form and purpose of the business entity.

  7. Debtor-in-possession financing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debtor-in-possession_financing

    DIP financing may be used to keep a business operating until it can be sold as a going concern, [4] if this is likely to provide a greater return to creditors than the firm's closure and a liquidation of assets. It may also give a troubled company a new start, albeit under strict conditions. In this case, "debtor in possession" financing refers ...

  8. Liquidating distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquidating_distribution

    Instead, the entire amount of shareholders' equity is distributed. [2] When a company has more liabilities than assets, equity is negative and no liquidating distribution is made at all. This is usually the case in bankruptcy liquidations. Creditors are always senior to shareholders in receiving the corporation's assets upon winding up. However ...

  9. Distressed securities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distressed_securities

    The market developed for distressed securities as the number of large public companies in financial distress increased in the 1980s and early 1990s. [5] In 1992, professor Edward Altman, who developed the Altman Z-score formula for predicting bankruptcy in 1968, estimated "the market value of the debt securities" of distressed firms as "is approximately $20.5 billion, a $42.6 billion in face ...