greenmail

noun
green·​mail | \ ˈgrēn-ˌmāl How to pronounce greenmail (audio) \

Definition of greenmail

: the practice of buying enough of a company's stock to threaten a hostile takeover and reselling it to the company at a price above market value also : the money paid for such stock

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Other Words from greenmail

greenmail transitive verb
greenmailer \ ˈgrēn-​ˌmā-​lər How to pronounce greenmailer (audio) \ noun

Did You Know?

Greenmail is a recent English coinage, but its history spans a millennium. In the Anglo-Saxon historical records for 1086, we find an early use of a word that still survives in Scottish English as mail, meaning "payment" or "rent." The 16th century saw the appearance of the compound blackmail, which was originally a tribute that freebooting chiefs at the Scottish border exacted in exchange for immunity from pillage. In 1862, the U.S. government began printing paper money using green ink, and soon the word green came to suggest money. Finally, in the 1980s, greenmail was coined by combining green and blackmail to describe a particular type of financial piracy.

Examples of greenmail in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web

That comes out to an obscene $225,000 per job for factory work, proving that neither party, and few states, can control the scourge of corporate greenmail. Dan Haar, courant.com, "Dan Haar: Connecticut vs. Wisconsin — Who Will Be Last To Adopt A Budget?," 7 Aug. 2017

First Known Use of greenmail

1983, in the meaning defined above

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More Definitions for greenmail

greenmail

noun

Financial Definition of greenmail

What It Is

Greenmail is an acquisition tactic whereby the acquirer attempts to obtain a controlling interest in a target by buying shares at a premium from the target's shareholders.

How It Works

Let's assume an entity that Company XYZ considers unsavory (we'll call it Party X) is attempting to acquire control of Company XYZ by offering to buy shares at a premium from Company XYZ's shareholders.

To avoid being purchased by Party X, Company XYZ's board of directors might offer to purchase Party X's shares for a price above the current market price. This of course makes Party X go away (and a lot richer, by the way), but the transaction can also be construed as Party X blackmailing (or greenmailing) Company XYZ by threatening to take over the company if it does not pay a particular premium to Party X.

Why It Matters

To avoid this situation, in which Company XYZ might make an offer to repurchase shares at a price above what other shareholders might get, anti-greenmail provisions exist. These provisions generally state that if Company XYZ pays a premium to repurchase shares, it must offer that premium to all shareholders. An anti-greenmail provision is a clause in a corporation's charter that deters the corporation's board from conducting a stock buyback.

Company XYZ does this in exchange for Party X's agreement not to attempt to acquire the company for a period of time. Anti-greenmail provisions are attempts to thwart takeover threats from speculators, disruptive shareholders, and other "unsavory" entities that are seeking a payoff rather than a genuine business relationship. In general, a corporation's shareholders must vote to adopt or abandon anti-greenmail provisions.

Source: Investing Answers

greenmail

noun
green·​mail | \ ˈgrēn-ˌmāl How to pronounce greenmail (audio) \

Legal Definition of greenmail

: the practice of buying enough of a company's stock to threaten a hostile takeover and reselling it to the company at a price above market value also : the money paid for such stock

Other Words from greenmail

greenmail transitive verb
greenmailer noun

History and Etymology for greenmail

green (money) + -mail (as in blackmail)