Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pages in category "Corporate spin-offs" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 321 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
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 ...
Lists of corporate mergers and acquisitions include both takeovers and mergers of corporations. Most are organized by the main company involved in the transactions. Most are organized by the main company involved in the transactions.
The new Kraft, technically the spin off, was left with brands like Oscar Myer and Stove Top while Mondelez International kept the likes of Oreo, Cadbury, and Nabisco. (Source: Evan-Amos, via ...
3Com: Shares soared after announcing the corporate spin-off of Palm, Inc. 360networks: A fiber optic company that had a market capitalization of over $13 billion but filed for bankruptcy a few months later. AboveNet: Its stock rose 32% on the day it announced a stock split.
In late 2017, the company acquired a former Citigroup card production facility in Columbus, Ohio and invested $25 million to build out a second, 200,000 square feet (19,000 m 2) credit card production facility, with a capacity to produce 67 million credit cards per year. [22] In January 2018, the company acquired Cayan for $1.05 billion. [23]
The parent company completes a spin-off of a subsidiary to the parent company's shareholders. Under Internal Revenue Code section 355, this could be tax-free if certain criteria are met. The former subsidiary (now owned by the parent company's shareholders, but separate from the parent company) then merges with a target company to create a ...
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 ...