How to avoid a bad merger. (ZSoft Corp.’s painful merger with Mediagenic Inc.): An article from: Soft-Letter
How to avoid a bad merger. (ZSoft Corp.’s painful merger with Mediagenic Inc.): An article from: Soft-Letter
This digital document is an article from Soft-Letter, published by Soft-letter on November 8, 1991. The length of the article is 719 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
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Title: How to avoid a bad merger. (ZSoft Corp.’s painful merger with Mediagenic Inc.)
Publication: Soft-Lett
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Does your company need a workout? Here’s how to implement informal plans of reorganization and avoid Chapter 11 or liquidation.(Cash Management): An article from: Strategic Finance
This digital document is an article from Strategic Finance, published by Institute of Management Accountants on September 1, 2004. The length of the article is 1801 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
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Title: Does your company need a workout? Here’s how to implement informal plans
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Avoid Foreclosure: How to Avoid And Prevent the Foreclosure of Your Home
Facing foreclosure? Know your options! Learn How to Avoid Foreclosure and Bankruptcy with the knowledge and resources available in “Avoid Foreclosure: How to Avoid and Prevent the Foreclosure of Your Home”. Whether you’re in the middle of a foreclosure or if you’re on the brink of bankruptcy and losing your home, “Avoid Foreclosure: How to Avoid and Prevent the Foreclosure of Your Home” will arm you with the knowledge and tools necessary to get you out of financial trouble, and help you
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How to File Your Own Bankruptcy (Or How to Avoid I| US $1.00 End Date: Saturday Feb-11-2012 1:03:05 PST Buy It Now for only: US $1.00 Buy it now | Add to watch list |
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Review by Drew Laughlin for Avoid Foreclosure: How to Avoid And Prevent the Foreclosure of Your Home
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A friend of mine asked me to read this book to help him understand, what he felt was his impending foreclosure. I wasn’t sure what to expect but I must say I was pleasantly surprised.
This book is a quick read but powerful in its contents. It not only educates the reader on what actions to take when you’re faced with a possible foreclosure but it also clarifies what you should do when buying a new home so you ensure that you will never have to face the possibility of foreclosure. It really helps people on both sides of the spectrum which is why I think this book is well worth the investment.
Finally, there are a lot of additional resources given that are worth double the price of this book. We all know how difficult it can be to find the right help at the right time. This book has done all that leg work for you.
Review by Richard Stooker for Avoid Foreclosure: How to Avoid And Prevent the Foreclosure of Your Home
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This book addresses an extremely serious situation in the U.S. today — the millions of home owners going through and facing foreclosure.
Unfortunately, despite some opening statements about the subprme mortgage mess, most of the book seems to have been written about 2000. It’s far behind not only the current crisis, the but the real estate bubble that preceded it.
Yet there’s not one word about the government’s program for distressed home sellers. The only reference to short sales was the title of a reference book.
In one way, this book is logical — but too much so. It starts out advising readers to avoid foreclosure first of all by making sure they buy only a house they can afford. Yes, it’s logical — but way too late for this book’s prospective market.
Some readers may laugh at its assertion that the lending financial institution is their friend. Thanks to the securitizing of mortgages, the lender has passed on the risk to financial institution and investors around the world.
There is some good info on getting out of debt, but if somebody’s three months behind on their mortgage they help. And Consumer Credit Counseling Services doesn’t cover mortgages (they basically work for credit card companies.)
Most of the resources are books on how to buy foreclosed property. Given that this book is aimed at people who want to keep their houses away from such real estate investors, that seems rather insensitive.
This book does have some basic information on how the industry works — or used to work — but is of little use to people struggling with their mortgages.