From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishbuyoutbuy‧out /ˈbaɪaʊt/ noun [countable] BFa situation in which someone gains control of a company by buying all or most of its shares a management buyout → buy out at buy1
Examples from the Corpus
buyout• AT&T successfully negotiated a buyout of McCaw Cellular.• Reports of negotiations have persisted since the Wall Street Journal reported last month that a buyout was imminent.• It was not a typical privatization, since all shares were sold to employees - what we call an employee buyout.• Financing buyouts has, however, retained its popularity given the greater security involved in such a deal.• Goodrich had approached Rohr about a friendly buyout several months ago, he said.• Some numbers crunchers predict that few non-defense employees will get buyouts this year under the authority that ends in December.• Co., the New York-based leveraged buyout specialist, sources said.• In the previous year only 53% of buyouts came from corporate restructuring.From Longman Business Dictionarybuyoutbuy‧out /ˈbaɪaʊt/ (also buy-out) noun [countable]FINANCE1when a person or organization buys a businessThe company has accepted a buyout offer of $44.50 a share.2FINANCE when a person or organization buys all the shares in a company owned by a particular shareholderThe company said it was continuing to negotiate a buyout of minority stakeholders.3HUMAN RESOURCES money given to someone to persuade them to leave a companyThe airline plans to cut its payroll by 5,000, mainly through buyouts.