shell company
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English[edit]
Noun[edit]
shell company (plural shell companies)
- (law, business) A company that engages in no substantive business activities, but instead exists as a vehicle for legal or financial transactions, typically to shield another party from liability or other issues.
- Synonyms: shell corporation, letterbox company, mailbox company, front company
- 2003 November 15, Tony Levene, “Capital letters”, in The Guardian[1]:
- It was a shell company and, the SEC alleges, never had researchers, research plans or any scientific resources.
- 2018, Oliver Bullough, chapter 2, in Moneyland, Profile Books, →ISBN, page 19:
- This luxury-loving and profligate shell company is registered at a betting shop on the Caledonian Road, an unlovely thoroughfare in North London on which you'd be more likely to find amphetamines than a top-notch lawyer.
Related terms[edit]
Translations[edit]
company without activity created for tax purposes
|
See also[edit]
Further reading[edit]
- shell corporation on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- John Smullen, Nicholas Hand, editors (2005), “shell company”, in A Dictionary of Finance and Banking, 3rd edition, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 375
- “shell company”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.