FACTOID # 121: Houses in English-speaking countries have the most rooms.
 
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Encyclopedia > Shell company
For the oil company, see Royal Dutch-Shell.

A shell corporation is defined in Barron's Finance & Investment Handbook as "a company that is incorporated but has no significant assets or operations. Such corporations may be formed to obtain financing prior to starting operations.... The term is also used of corporations set up by fraudulent operators as fronts to conceal tax evasion schemes." They are also known as Specified Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPACs).


Shell corporations may be used to launder and recycle money from the hidden face of the world economy. They take advantage of the existence of 250 free zones and tax havens, 95% of which are former British, French, Spanish, Dutch or U.S. colonies or concessions that remain dependent on the former colonial powers.


Shell corporations are not in themselves illegal, and they may have legitimate business purposes.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
www.shell.com - the global homepage of the Shell Group (147 words)
Shell is a global group of oil, gas and petrochemical companies with a broad portfolio of hydrogen, biofuels, wind and solar power interests.
Shell announces plans to develop in the ultra deepwater of the Gulf of Mexico
Shell is a global group of energy and petrochemicals companies.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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