Originally Posted by
Teo9969
Hamm owns 68% of CLR. He runs the company through and through. There is no board, no investors, no executives that can out-vote him.
If he loses half of that...geez, even just 20% of the total shares (~30% of his shares) then all of the sudden he's no longer majority owner, the company probably ends up in multiple investors hands and all the crap that the average publicly traded company has to deal with in terms of battles with shareholders become particularly relevant.
Or a potentially worse scenario: his wife actually holds onto the shares she gets in the divorce and now has a major say in the business practices of CLR, makes use of it and somehow damages the company.
None of this is inherently *bad* but a major shakeup of the ownership of the company rightly means that any major moves the company is going to make need to placed on hold to see how things pan out.
Bookmarks