In many ways, there is no after for anything to happen in. The company no longer exits. Its assets are now owned by others. It is over.
The company filed for bankruptcy and is no longer in business. All remaining stock has been liquidated.
The bankrupt company's assets were liquidated following the court proceedings. (The word liquidated was also used as a euphemism to indicate killing off rivals or political opponents.)
They fail.
in the case of a company being liquidated, the suppliers of finance have the first preference over the assets of the company. One they have all been paid, then the preference shareholders will be ther next one to be paid. If there is any assets left, then the ordinary shareholders would be considered.
Steve & Barry's stores no longer exist. As of 2008, the company filed bankruptcy and liquidated all stock.
You can use "thereafter" to show the sequence of events, such as: "She completed her degree, and thereafter, she started working at the company."
If a company was liquidated and there were in force policies at the time, they can still be paid by your state's Life Insurance Guaranty Association, which is a group that pays claims for insolvent companies and then assesses the costs to all other life insurers in that state. You can contact your state's insurance Department to find out how to reach the Guaranty Association.
The estate goes to the state. They will then determine what to do with it. Typically the estate is liquidated, everything sold off and the money goes into the state budget.
I'm not sure what a "liquidised" company is. If you mean a liquidated (i. e., bankrupted) company, your debt remains and was probably purchased with the other assets of the company by some other business or person.The new owner of the debt should notify you of the place to send payments. This assumes you have kept your address current with the liquidated creditor. If you cannot receive the notice because you failed to do so, you could find yourself with a big surprise when they do find you.
Preferred stockholders have a greater claim on the assets and profits of a company compared to common stockholders. If a company is liquidated, preferred stockholders have to be paid first before the common stockholders.
Yes. If a company goes bankrupt and, especially, if its business is liquidated, you can claim the full loss on the stock in the year the event occurred.
Someone has the car and the finance company has a lien on it. Any sale would have been fraudulent.