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Talk:Tender offer

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Untitled

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Somebody remove that statement, please —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.90.45.116 (talk) 14:09, 19 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Implementation

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If a majority of shareholders agree to sell, what happens to the remaining shareholders? -- Beland (talk) 17:07, 18 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Public offer

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Hi! Is there such notion as "public offer" under the anglo-saxon law? In the meaning which it has under the continental law (an offer made to unidentified offeree). --Vlfedotov (talk) 10:37, 17 January 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Interwiki correction

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Interwiki was incorrect and failed to link to the proper article in German, Estonian, Dutch, Polish, Russian and Ukrainian. The links to all these languages led to an article on "offer", a much simpler, prior legal concept than "tender offer", which is a specialized action in securities and corporate law.

The concept of "offer" is covered in the English Wikipedia article offer and acceptance. Interwiki links to the articles in the aforementioned six languages, which are now removed from this article (tender offer), should be made (if at all) from that article (offer and acceptance).

Thanks!

A.R. (talk) 22:24, 9 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Inline citations

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The article currently has no inline citations to its sources, which isn't helped by the fact that the list of sources is styled as a normal dotted list. In addition to making it difficult to differentiate it from other lists apart from the title of the section being "References", the styling also makes it challenging to add citations to the sources, since the sources don't have any numbers. Adding inline citations would help making it clear for readers from which specific source a specific piece of information is taken, and the current list of sources makes it hard to do that. Because of this I feel that the list of sources should be changed to something more friendly to the concept of inline citations, and that such citations should then be added. Dogs are just insanely adorable (talk) 09:51, 9 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]