Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On 25 March 1950, Berger Paints Pakistan Limited was incorporated in Pakistan. In 1955, the Karachi factory was established. In 1974, Berger Pakistan became a public limited company. In 1974, Berger Pakistan 50.62% shares were held by Jenson & Nicholson Limited (U.K. parent company), 49.38% shares were held by Pakistani investors.
Gurbachan serves as director of Anshana Properties, Arambol Properties, Citland Commercial Credits, Lobelia Buildwell, Scorpio Research and Consultants, Vinu Estates, Vignette Investments, UK Paints, Berger Becker Coatings, Berger Paints, Jolly Properties, Rakesh Estate, Rakesh Containers, Reshma Properties, Rishkul Properties, Creative Reattach, Kaydee Farms, Malibu Estate, Bigg Investments ...
Kuldip Singh Dhingra is an Indian entrepreneur, promoter and chairman of Berger Paints. Kuldip has been listed as one of Forbes India's richest Indians and also in its The World's Billionaires list among the highest Indians by net worth .
In 2002, Asian Paints acquired a 60% stake in Egyptian paint manufacturer SCIB Chemicals for ₹ 24.5 crore (US$5.04 million). [14] It also acquired a 50.1% stake in the SGX-listed Berger International Singapore, which had operations in 11 countries across Southeast Asia, West Asia, the Caribbean, China and Malta, for US$20.8 million. [15]
This is a partial list of people made and named in the Panama Papers as shareholders, directors and beneficiaries of offshore companies. [1] The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) released the full list of companies and individuals in the Panama Papers on 10 May 2016. [1]
In June 2007, the Dutch firm AkzoNobel (owner of Crown Berger paints) bid £7.2 billion (€10.66 billion or $14.5 billion) for ICI. An area of concern about a potential deal was ICI's British pension fund , which had a deficit of almost £700 million and future liabilities of more than £9 billion at the time. [ 58 ]
Finland requires 40% of state owned enterprises to have female directors for 40% of their board seats. [61] The Netherlands requires public companies with more than 250 employees to have female directors for 30% of the board seats. [61] In France, a bill was passed in 2011 requiring 40% female directorship by 2016.
He has extensive experience in the field of investment financing, corporate supervision and legal aspects of the activities of commercial companies. He was a member of the supervisory board of the Industrial Development Agency S.A. from May 2017 to December 2019, and a member of the Board of Directors of IDA S.A. from December 2019. He ...