British Columbia Resources Investment Corporation

http://dbpedia.org/resource/British_Columbia_Resources_Investment_Corporation an entity of type: Thing

The British Columbia Resources Investment Corporation, or BCRIC (pronounced "brick"), was a holding company formed under the government of William R. Bennett. The company took over ownership of various sawmills and mines that had been bought and bailed out by the government. The name was eventually changed to Westar Group Ltd. Because of significant investment in a North Sea oil play by a subsidiary, Westar Petroleum, and bad timing in a mining investment by another subsidiary, , the company ran into financial trouble. Investors saw their thousands of dollars dwindle to pennies. * v * t * e rdf:langString
rdf:langString British Columbia Resources Investment Corporation
rdf:langString British Columbia Resources Investment Corporation
rdf:langString British Columbia Resources Investment Corporation
xsd:integer 319498
xsd:integer 1010908186
rdf:langString BC Resource Investment Corporation - Bearer Share Certificate - 5 Shares
rdf:langString The British Columbia Resources Investment Corporation, or BCRIC (pronounced "brick"), was a holding company formed under the government of William R. Bennett. The company took over ownership of various sawmills and mines that had been bought and bailed out by the government. The name was eventually changed to Westar Group Ltd. The most famous aspect of the company were the five free bearer shares, dated August 7, 1979, which were distributed to all British Columbians, to promote investment in the province, and earn back a profit to the buyer. British Columbians and investors were encouraged to buy more. The company expanded and bought numerous mining and logging installations. Because of significant investment in a North Sea oil play by a subsidiary, Westar Petroleum, and bad timing in a mining investment by another subsidiary, , the company ran into financial trouble. Investors saw their thousands of dollars dwindle to pennies. In 1995, the shares were consolidated at a ratio of 125 to 1. At the time, five bearer shares were worth 0.8% of a post-consolidation share. In June 1997, the consolidated shares were subject to a compulsory buy-out at $70 each ($0.56 per bearer share) as part of a privatization transaction by the Jim Pattison Group. However, the buyout had a 10-year limit, which expired on June 30, 2007, and so outstanding share certificates no longer have any value. * v * t * e * v * t * e
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3363

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