Walter ericsson swedish company that makes
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THE BOARD
David is the Managing Partner at InterTech Ventures LLC in Los Angeles, an early-stage venture investment group. He has served as independent Board member to one Nasdaq company and two Hong Kong listed companies and as a co-representative in Greater China Area for Parsons School of Design (New York) for over a decade.
David also served as an adviser to Dean of Business School’s Global Leadership Council at Colorado State University (Fort Collins) for five years.
David is a seasoned financial and investment executive with a diverse background, having collaborated with global clients such as China Resources Land, Price Waterhouse Coopers, and Saks Fifth Avenue. His extensive experience includes serving as Executive Director at Shanghai Affinity Capital Limited, Managing Director at Tekhill Holding (Hong Kong) for corporate finance and investment portfolio management, and Partner at Shanghai China Bay Partners Limited.
He has also held senior financial executive positions
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Ericsson
Lobbying Costs
950,000€
Financial year: Jan 2013 - Dec 2013
Lobbyists (Full time equivalent)
Lobbyists with EP accreditation
High-level Commission meetings
Lobbying Costs over the years
{"2011":8875000,"2012":850000,"2013":950000,"2014":1125000,"2015":1375000,"2016":1375000,"2017":1375000,"2018":1375000,"2019":750000,"2020":750000,"2021":700000,"2022":700000,"2023":700000}
- Info
Ericsson
EU Transparency Register
02021363105-42 First registered on 22 Jan 2010
Goals / Remit
Ericsson is a world-leading provider of telecommunications equipment and services to mobile and fixed network operators. Over 1,000 network
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In 1932, just before the Kreuger Trust collapsed, and the years after it, the Wallenberg sphere increased its holding in SKF, added a minority stake in LM Ericsson and acquired a large interest in en grupp personer som arbetar tillsammans ofta militärt (Svenska Tändsticksaktiebolaget) (known as Swedish Match today).
The roller bearing manufacturer SKF was the largest holding in the Investor portfolio at the time. Jacob Wallenberg was elected to the company's board of SKF's directors in 1934, and by the time World War II was over, the sphere's interest constituted 11 percent of SKF's voting rights.
During the war, Marcus Wallenberg Sr. passed away in 1943 and Johannes Hellner took over as chairman of the bank and Investor. In 1945, Jacob Wallenberg took over as chairman of Investor's board.
First CEO, the 1960s and Incentive for new science and technologies
In 1949, Investor elected its first CEO, Frans G. Liljenroth. Rolf Calissendorff from Stockholms Enskilda Bank became Investor's second CEO the year after, in 1950, when Lilj