Merger in a sentence as a noun

Thus, there has been a huge trend in law firm mergers the last couple of decades.

If there has ever been an obvious need to prevent a merger it's this one.

They are the most scored by an NBA player in his first three starts since the NBA-ABA merger 1976-77.- Everyone loves him.

The proposition of this merger is one of the most blatantly negative outcomes for the public I've heard in some time.

One company I was at did a merger with another startup, and most of the other company's engineers quit.

The point of diminishing returns for that are probably a quarter of the size Dewey ended up after the merger.

Companies usually get bought for cash and stock that the company owns, or they can issue more stock if it's a merger that gets broad approval.

Yet, law firms as businesses bear almost no resemblance to the sort of traditional companies that benefit from mergers.

Even completely ignoring the document, I can't imagine who thought public good would have been served by allowing such a merger.

Prices are coming down because the government prevented the ATT-Tmobile merger and Tmobile decided to start competing on price.

Prior to the merger, LeBouef & Lamb was financially sound, while Dewey Ballantine was facing declining revenues.

"The industry is acting like a low-competition industry, scaling back investment and plowing its profits into dividends and share buybacks and merger efforts.

Basically, Aaron got a chance with Y Combinator, which he parlayed into a merger with Reddit's parent company, mostly through personal connections.

The folks pushing the merger, Davis and the consultants, painted this narrative of LeBouef merging its way into a prestigious brand, and Dewey shoring itself up with a profitable marriage-partner.

And when they missed, it was the investors who would force a merger or sale of the company, take out their liquidation preference to get a return on their money, and leave founders with a zero-equity return after perhaps years of working for little or no salary and putting in 20-hour workdays in the process.

If, however, the company can do a qualified funding before the note matures, the debt converts into preferred-stock equity on the terms struck with the equity investors at first funding, usually with a price discount, sometimes with a price cap, and typically with merger-premium protection for the converting noteholders for the added risk they take in being early in the game when risks are at their highest.

Merger definitions

noun

the combination of two or more commercial companies

See also: amalgamation uniting

noun

an occurrence that involves the production of a union

See also: fusion unification