Capital structure: Difference between revisions
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{{g}}:''They asked me for my place in the capital structure. I said I was [[senior unsecured]]. They fired me — for insubordination.'' | {{g}}:''They asked me for my place in the capital structure. I said I was [[senior unsecured]]. They fired me — for insubordination.'' | ||
::—{{author|Hunter Barkley}}’s forthcoming {{br|The ISDA Protocol}} (as yet unpublished) | ::—{{author|Hunter Barkley}}’s forthcoming {{br|The ISDA Protocol}} (as yet unpublished and, come to think of it, unwritten) | ||
Of a {{csaprov|corporation}}, the arrangement, priority and ranking of its [[shareholder]]s, [[creditor]]s and [[debenture]]holders. | Of a {{csaprov|corporation}}, the arrangement, priority and ranking of its [[shareholder]]s, [[creditor]]s and [[debenture]]holders. |
Revision as of 14:39, 22 September 2020
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- They asked me for my place in the capital structure. I said I was senior unsecured. They fired me — for insubordination.
- —Hunter Barkley’s forthcoming The ISDA Protocol (as yet unpublished and, come to think of it, unwritten)
Of a corporation, the arrangement, priority and ranking of its shareholders, creditors and debentureholders.
Usually, common shareholders at the bottom, then preferred shareholders, then subordinated creditors, then unsecured (aka “ordinary”) creditors, then secured creditors.
That kind of thing.
When you have a convoluted corporate structure — hey: who doesn’t? — then the arrangement between the various entities in your group of shareholdings, inter-company loans, parental guarantees and so on can be quite the game of pan-dimensional chess.