Disregarding the rationale, can you answer a couple of questions for future analysis sdo we can tell how much Kodak film is sold using ALaris reporting requirements? When American corporations buy out British companies completely, how does the corporation stay British. Doesn't Alaris die? Why is reporting over there still required?
Also, vice versus. If a British firm buys out an American corporation, doesn't it effectively belong there with no reporting in the US any longer?
The financial statements of KA don't report the amount of film sold - they report revenues, expenses, assets and liabilities.
Corporations are entities created by statute. They only exist as artificial creations - their existence is purely a creation of statute, and their powers and responsibilities and entitlements flow entirely from their statutory created structure.
Corporations can stay in existence for ever. Not so for people. And corporations can and do own things and owe things.
If someone - individual or corporate - buys a corporation's shares, they own those shares, including any rights and obligations attached to the shares. They do not own the things owned by the corporation, nor do they owe what the corporation owes, absent things like creditors insisting on additional
personal guarantees from the individual shareholders.
KA is a UK corporate entity. It can never become a US corporate entity.
It could sell assets, leaving itself as a shell, but for long as the statutory maintenance requirements are maintained, it will remain in existence as a UK corporation.
If Kingswood wants to create a US corporation - or Canadian corporation, or Cayman Island corporation, or whatever country corporation - and take steps to create business relationships between that and KA, they can. The terms of KA's agreement with the current version of Eastman Kodak may or may not make that possible or practical.
Corporations are not the people who own them, or the people who work for them. Their statutory existence determines what they are, and what they aren't.