Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The company was formed in November 2012 through the merger of Billerud AB and Korsnäs AB. [4]In the 2012 merger, Billerud was the formal buyer. Korsnäs' owner, Investment Kinnevik AB, received a sum of SEK 3.2 billion as well as 25.1% of the votes in the new company and consequently became the largest owner in the merged BillerudKorsnäs. [5]
Pages in category "Food and drink companies based in Stockholm" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Stockholm: 2003 Video games P A Avanza: Financials Investment services Stockholm: 1999 Stock broker P A Axel Johnson: Conglomerates - Stockholm: 1873 [6] Retail holdings, part of Axel Johnson Group: P A Axel Johnson Group: Conglomerates - Stockholm: 1873 Diversified holdings P A Axfood: Consumer services Food retailers & wholesalers Stockholm: 1964
List of food cooperatives Anna-Britt Agnsäter – former head of the cooperative's test kitchen and inventor of the food pyramid Inger Thorén - Chemical engineer and food chemist, cereal chemist at KF's bakery laboratory between 1953 and 1957.
Östermalmstorg is a square in the district of Östermalm, in Stockholm, Sweden. It is known principal for Östermalm Market Hall (Östermalmshallen) which first opened in 1889. Östermalmshallen's interior is a marketplace for food and related delicacies. Östermalmstorg was also the location of the first Åhléns department store which opened ...
Scandinavia’s top sales agent TrustNordisk has scored major deals on the English-language epic “Stockholm Bloodbath” by Oscar-nominated Mikael Håfström (‘Evil”), which has sold to ...
Both before and after this period, some new Germanic dishes were also brought in by immigrants, such as people related to the Hanseatic League, settling in Stockholm, Visby, and Kalmar. Swedish traders and aristocrats naturally also picked up some food traditions in foreign countries; cabbage rolls ( kåldolmar ) being one example.
This was known colloquially as the "Stockholm Solution". In 2007, the United States Federal Reserve noted, "In the early 1970s, Sweden had one of the highest income levels in Europe; today, its lead has all but disappeared...So, even well-managed financial crises don't really have a happy ending".