← Back to context Comment by whall6 17 hours ago Exactly: enrich shareholders at the expense of their own coffers. 2 comments whall6 Reply andsoitis 15 hours ago > enrich shareholders at the expense of their own coffers.This makes no sense. The coffers belong to the shareholders. whall6 6 hours ago “belong” is a flexible word. You’re right in theory but depending on the situation money in your bank account is worth more to you than an equivalent amount of money in a company’s bank account (of which you are a shareholder).
andsoitis 15 hours ago > enrich shareholders at the expense of their own coffers.This makes no sense. The coffers belong to the shareholders. whall6 6 hours ago “belong” is a flexible word. You’re right in theory but depending on the situation money in your bank account is worth more to you than an equivalent amount of money in a company’s bank account (of which you are a shareholder).
whall6 6 hours ago “belong” is a flexible word. You’re right in theory but depending on the situation money in your bank account is worth more to you than an equivalent amount of money in a company’s bank account (of which you are a shareholder).
> enrich shareholders at the expense of their own coffers.
This makes no sense. The coffers belong to the shareholders.
“belong” is a flexible word. You’re right in theory but depending on the situation money in your bank account is worth more to you than an equivalent amount of money in a company’s bank account (of which you are a shareholder).