the person appointed by a company's creditors to assess the company's assets and liabilities, to sell assets, pay liabilities and distribute the remaining monies to shareholders and creditors.
or receiver or administrator - person appointed by a court who realizes (turns into cash) a company's assets in order to repay creditors.
Any person or body whose function is to administer or liquidate assets of which the debtor has been divested or to supervise the administration of his or her affairs. . (See Judicial-civil: Insolvency)
a secondary market company that buys product that has reached the end of its sales life in the "A" channel.
A person appointed, usually by a court, to conduct the winding-up of a company and the liquidation of its assets. (See also Administrator and Receiver).
a legal entity or natural person, which/who performs functions as to termination of a bank's activity and satisfaction of its creditors' demands
(law) a person (usually appointed by a court of law) who liquidates assets or preserves them for the benefit of affected parties
an authorized person who will deal with the assets and liabilities of the company including the bank account and employees of the company
an officer of the company S
The Official Receiver or an IP appointed to administrate the liquidation of a company or partnership.
A professional firm or person who is charged with the responsibility of liquidating a company.
An Accountant appointed to manage and oversee the winding up of a company and the disposal of it's assets
The person appointed either by the court or by the creditors of a company to 'cash in' all of the assets of the company, pay its debts insofar as this can be done, and to distribute any surplus amongst the shareholders. Close
The person appointed to liquidate the company.
A Licensed Insolvency Practitioner appointed to deal with the assets and liabilities of the company in either a CVL, MVL or Compulsory Liquidation.
Term used in Great Britain for a person appointed by an unsecured creditor to oversee the sale of an insolvent firm's assets and the repayment of its debts.
The official responsible for paying off the debts of a company.
Insolvency Practitioner appointed by the creditors to wind up a company.
The person appointed to deal with the assets and liabilities of the company or partnership once the resolution to wind up has been passed or a compulsory winding up order has been made.
the Official Receiver or an insolvency practitioner who is appointed to attend to the liquidation of a company or partnership
A person appointed to take charge of a company when it is wound up.
The Official Receiver or licensed insolvency practitioner appointed to act as liquidator of a company or partnership.
person appointed to liquidate a business. Must be a licensed insolvency practitioner.
Licensed insolvency practitioner appointed to wind-up a company.
A liquidator is an insolvency practitioner appointed by the Court or by officers of the company and later confirmed by creditors. A liquidator's job is to turn the company's assets into cash, distribute the proceeds to creditors in accordance with a statutory order of priority set out in the Corporations Act and investigate the affairs of the company. The end result of liquidation is the dissolution of the company.
A person appointed by the court or by the creditors of a Company or by the members of a Company, to 'get in' what is owed to the Company; to take charge of the assets and turn them into money,to pay the Company's debts in an order laid down by statute, and finally to distribute what is left, if anything, amongst the members in proportion to their shareholdings.
One appointed to wind up the affairs of a company. This is normally in a solvency situation, as opposed to an insolvency.
Under the Insolvency Act 1986, the liquidator is the person, other than the Official Receiver, responsible for dealing with the winding up of a company.
Person appointed by an unsecured creditor in the United Kingdom to oversee the sale of an insolvent firm's assets and the repayment of its debts.
A qualified person appointed by a court to close down a business that is a proprietary company and realise and distribute its assets in payment of its liabilities.
An appointed person in charge of winding up the operations of a company and the liquidation of the company’s assets.
In law, a liquidator is the officer appointed when a company goes into winding-up or liquidation who has responsibility for collecting in all of the assets of the company and settling all claims against the company before putting the company into dissolution.