A corporation that enjoys all the rights of a corporation, but without a profit goal. Most charities, educational institutions, home owner associations and so forth, are non-profit corporations.
Mcclarty- most non-profits do, and must, have a profit goal in order to sustain. It usually is not their primary goal, and many of the actions taken on their behalf are not profit oriented. A primary difference is that a non-profit may not use its profits to then "inure" (benefit) the various officers and directors. Employees are entitled to a salary, but unlike a for-profit, if profit is made it must then go back into the organization.
A Delaware corporation would be a corporation that is incorporated in the state of Delaware.
Dividends are income to the receiving corporation. If it is a sub-chapter S corporation, it is income to the shareholders, as is any other income of the corporation.
Bondholders are creditors of a corporation; they have loaned the corporation money and received bonds as evidence of the corporation's. Stockholders, both common and preferred, are owners of a corporation. (STOCKHOLDERS ARE NOT THE CREDITOR)
Yes. It is a corporation
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A corporation shields one from personal liability. A corporation can keep ownership confidential. A corporation may have income tax advantages.
"Public Corporation" can refer to a corporation that offers shares on the public market, or it can refer to a corporation that is owned by the government. Similarly, "Private Corporation" can refer to any corporation that is not government owned, or a corporation that does not list its shares on public share markets. A "crown corporation" is one that is owned by the government. This term is more widely used in UK, some Commonwealth countries and other monarchies.
Bondholders are creditors of a corporation; they have loaned the corporation money and received bonds as evidence of the corporation's. Stockholders, both common and preferred, are owners of a corporation. (STOCKHOLDERS ARE NOT THE CREDITOR)
The Xerox Corporation is an independent corporation, not a subsidiary of any other corporation.
The corporation that replaced Trust is the Resolution Trust Corporation.