Dictionary
buyout
noun
The acquisition of a controlling interest in a business or corporation by outright purchase or by purchase of a majority of issued shares of stock.
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The word "buyout" is correct and usable in written English.
It is used when a company or investor purchases all of a company's shares, thus taking control of all aspects of the company. For example, "The tech company underwent a buyout, and the new owners changed the entire management team."
Exact(60)
The cost of the transfer is €20m and the buyout clause will be €50m".
"There is a 'good-faith clause' in relation to serious discussions but I can't say it is a cast-iron buyout clause.
Lazaridis's move, noted in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission SECcomesomes after he failed to gather finance for a buyout of the company during the summer as it looked as though it was going to be sold for $4.9bn to a consortium led by Fairfax Holdings, a Canadian private equity group.
Murdoch made him editor of the Times in 2002 and entrusted him with the role of managing editor of the Wall Street Journal after the buyout of Dow Jones.
Gordon Taylor, the PFA's chief executive, said: "If you are going to have a supposed buyout clause, it should be that but it is different as it says, 'If there is no qualification for the Champions League and if there is a minimum offer of £40m, then the parties will get around the table to discuss things.' But it does not say the club has to sell.
Simon Blecher, of HQ Fonder, an investment fund, calculates that the company could mobilise some SKr25 billion immediately and release another SKr40 billion in the short term, which could go a long way towards a buyout.
Newspaper publishers continue holding to their strategy of buying out expensive veterans in order to shrink newsroom staffs; nearly the entire editorial board of the Newark Star Ledger just accepted their buyout offers.
Even a sharp western investor, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, an American buyout fund, had its fingers badly burnt by an investment in Lomonosov, formerly a state-owned porcelain factory in St Petersburg.
So argues the California Public Employees Retirement Systemm (CalPERS), the largest public pension fund in America, which has invested almost $20 billion of its $129 billion assets in an assortment of venture-capital, buyout and real-estate funds.The strategy may have been good for CalPERS itself but so far it adamantly refuses to tell.
The proceeds are distributed in the form of dividends to buyout groups.
But in practical terms, if the company wanted to offload the pension liability (as does happen via the buyout market) or if the employee converted the pension promise into a pension pot and bought an annuity, the level of bond yields wouild determine the pension.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com