TeliaSonera

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TeliaSonera AB
Image:TeliaSonera logo.png
Type Public (OMX: TLSN)
Founded 2003
Location Stockholm, Sweden
Key people Anders Igel, CEO
Industry Telecommunications
Products Mobile network operator,
Internet services
Revenue $10.7 billion USD (FY 2004)
Employees 29,082
Website www.teliasonera.com

TeliaSonera AB is the dominant telephone company and mobile network operator in Sweden and Finland, and is also active in other countries in Northern and Eastern Europe, with a total (2004) of 26 million customers, 29,082 employees, sales of 81,937 million SEK, and profit of 12,964 million SEK. It is headquartered in Stockholm and its stocks are traded on the Stockholm Stock Exchange.

Corporate history

TeliaSonera is the result of a merger in 2003 between the Swedish and Finnish telecommunications companies, Telia and Sonera. Both have a history as national telephone monopolies before privatisation. The separate brand names Telia and Sonera have continued to be used in the Swedish and Finnish national markets respectively. Of the shares, 43.5 % are owned by the Swedish State, 13.2 % by the Finnish State, and the rest by institutions, companies, and private investors in Sweden, Finland and abroad. (See the corporate site.)

The Swedish Kungl. Telegrafverket (Royal telegraph) was founded in 1853, when the first electric telegraph line was established between Stockholm and Uppsala. Sweden was one of few countries where the Bell System never got a strong hold, because Bell's invention was not patented in Sweden and a Swedish private competitor, Allmänna Telefon, was thus able to find an independent equipment supplier in Lars Magnus Ericsson. In this early competition, Telegrafverket with its brand Rikstelefon was a late comer. However, by securing a national monopoly on long distance telephone lines, it was able with time to control and take over the local networks of quickly growing private telephone companies. A de facto telephone monopoly position was reached around 1920, and never needed legal sanction. In 1953 the name was modernized to Televerket. On July 1, 1992 this huge government agency's regulating functions was split off into Post- och telestyrelsen (PTS), with similar functions as the U.S. Federal Communications Commission. The operation of the national radio and TV broadcast network was spun off into a company named Teracom. On July 1, 1993 the remaining telephone and mobile network operator was transformed into a government-owned shareholding company, named Telia AB. At the height of the dotcom bubble on June 13, 2000, close to one third of Telia's shares were introduced on the Stockholm Stock Exchange, bringing solid cash to the Swedish state. In the 1980s, Televerket was a pioneering mobile network operator with the NMT system, followed in the 1990s by GSM. Private competition in analog cell phone systems had already broken the telephone monopoly, and the growing Internet allowed more turf for the starting competition. The most important of Telia's Swedish competitors in these areas has been Tele2. When PTS awarded four licenses for the 3rd generation cellular networks in December 2000, Telia was not among the winners, but has later managed to establish an agreement to share Tele2's 3G network.

Sonera history missing here.

See also

External links


Mobile phone operators of Finland
Elisa | Sonera | DNA
MVNO: Saunalahti | Globetel | TeleFinland | Tele2 | Cubio


Mobile phone networks by region (list)
Multiregional:

3 | movistar | Orange | T-Mobile | TIM | Virgin Mobile | Vodafone

Satellite:

Globalstar | Iridium | Thuraya | ACeS

Africa:

mCel | MTN | MobiNil | V-Mobile | Vodacom

Asia Pacific:

AirTel | Astel | Au | BPL Mobile | BSNL | China Mobile | China Netcom | China Unicom | DiGi Telecommunication | Hutch | Dolphin | Etisalat | Globe Telecom | Idea Cellular | KTF | LG Telecom | Next Mobile | NTT DoCoMo | Optus | Orange Australia | Reliance Infocomm | SingTel | SK Telecom | Smart Communications | SmarTone-Vodafone | StarHub | Sun Cellular | Tata Indicom | Telecom New Zealand | Telstra | Touch Mobile | TU-KA | Willcom | Nepal Telecom | Spice Nepal | United Telecom Limited

Caribbean:

BaTelCo | Cable & Wireless (Caribbean) | Digicel | ETECSA | Laqtel | Setar | Sunbeach | TSTT

Europe:

Alands | Amena | BeeLine | BASE | Belgacom | Bouygues Telecom | Comviq | Connect | Connex Romania | Cosmote | Cytamobile | E-Plus | Elisa Oyj | Finnish 2G | KPN | MegaFon | Meteor | Mobikom | Mobistar | Mobtel | MTS | NetCom | O2 | Optimus | Pannon GSM | Proximus | Quest Tel | SFR | Sonofon | Stet Hellas | TDC | Telenor | Telfort | TeliaSonera | TMN | Telekom Srbije | Telering | Wind | Xfera

North America:

7-Eleven Wireless | Aliant | ALLTEL | Bell Mobility | Boost Mobile | Cingular Wireless | Cricket | Dobson | Dryden Mobility | Iusacell | KMTS Mobility | MTS | Fido | NMI Mobility | Northcoast PCS (defunct) | NorthernTel Mobility | PC Mobile | Primus Canada | NEXTEL | Rogers Wireless | SaskTel | Sprint PCS | TBayTel Mobility | Telcel | TELUS | Unefon | Verizon Wireless | Western Wireless

South America:

Amazônia Celular | Brasil Telecom GSM | Claro | Comcel | CTBC | CTI Móvil | Digitel TIM | Entel PCS | GT&T | Movilnet | Oi | Personal (Argentina) | Personal (Paraguay) | Porta | Sercomtel Celular | Smartcom | Telemig Celular | Telesur | Vivo

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