subsidiary

Management

(noun)

A company owned by a parent company or holding company.

Related Terms

  • parent company
  • division
Business

(noun)

A company owned by the parent company or holding company

Related Terms

  • cluster
  • IT
Accounting

(noun)

A company that is completely or partly owned and partly or wholly controlled by another company that owns more than half of the subsidiary's equity.

Related Terms

  • off-balance-sheet financing
  • operating lease

Examples of subsidiary in the following topics:

  • Fully Owned Subsidiary

  • Reporting for a Combined Entity

    • The ownership of more than 50% of voting stock creates a subsidiary.
    • The financial statements of the parent and subsidiary are consolidated for reporting purposes.
    • The subsidiary can be a company, corporation, or limited liability company.
    • An operating subsidiary is a business term frequently used within the United States's railroad industry.
    • Consolidated financial statements show the parent and the subsidiary as one single entity.
  • Cluster Structure

    • An organization has a cluster structure when it is composed of numerous, relatively independent business divisions and subsidiaries.
    • An organization has a cluster structure when it is composed of numerous, relatively independent business divisions and subsidiaries.
    • A business division may include one or many subsidiaries.
    • Subsidiaries are separate, distinct legal entities for the purposes of taxation, regulation, and liability.
    • A good example that can differentiate divisions and subsidiaries would be Google.
  • Structure of Corporations

    • In a large organization, various parts of the business may be run by different subsidiaries, and a business division may include one or many subsidiaries.
    • Each subsidiary is a separate legal entity owned by the primary business or by another subsidiary in the hierarchy.
    • However, Compaq (a part of HP since 2002) operates as a subsidiary, using the Compaq brand name.
    • However, the YouTube video service is a subsidiary of Google because it remains operated as YouTube, LLC -- a separate business entity even though it is owned by Google.
    • Hewlett Packard is an example of a corporation with multiple divisions and subsidiaries.
  • Joint ventures and direct investment

    • Thus, they will invest in wholly owned subsidiaries.
    • By establishing overseas subsidiaries, a multinational organization can compete more aggressively because it is "in" the marketplace.
    • However, subsidiaries require more investment as the subsidiary is responsible for all marketing activities in a foreign country.
    • The subsidiary strategy requires complete understanding of business conditions, customs, markets, labor, and other foreign market factors.
  • Types of Investments: Dependence on Ownership Share

    • Types of investments include: 20% to 50% (as an asset), greater than 50% (as a subsidiary), and less than 20% (as an investment position).
    • The ownership of more than 50% of voting stock creates a subsidiary.
    • A subsidiary company, subsidiary, or daughter company is a company that is completely or partly owned and partly or wholly controlled by another company that owns more than half of the subsidiary's stock.
    • The subsidiary can be a company, corporation, or limited liability company.
    • An operating subsidiary is a business term frequently used within the United States railroad industry.
  • Becoming an International Bank

    • The U.S. bank establishes a subsidiary.
    • Subsidiary can accept deposits from both U.S. residents and foreigners but can only grant loans for international business activity.
    • Method 3: A foreign bank enters the U.S. market through a subsidiary U.S. bank.
    • Thus, the foreign bank controls the U.S. bank, converting it into a subsidiary.
    • Many foreign banks use subsidiaries to enter the U.S. banking market because the U.S. has an extremely complex legal system.
  • Being Aware of Off-Balance-Sheet Financing

    • An example of off-balance-sheet financing is an unconsolidated subsidiary.
    • A parent company may not be required to consolidate a subsidiary into its financial statements for reporting purposes; however the parent company may be obligated to pay the unconsolidated subsidiaries liabilities.
  • Methods of Paying Dividends

    • Stock or scrip dividends are those paid out in the form of additional stock shares of the issuing corporation or another corporation, such as its subsidiary corporation.
    • Property dividends or dividends in specie (Latin for "in kind") are those paid out in the form of assets from the issuing corporation or another corporation, such as a subsidiary corporation.
    • For large companies with subsidiaries, dividends can take the form of shares in a subsidiary company.
  • Financial Statement Notes

    • In consolidated financial statements, all subsidiaries are listed as well as the amount of ownership (controlling interest) that the parent company has in the subsidiaries.
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