19-623: Telekom may refer to: A1 Telekom Austria Group , Austria A1 Telekom Austria Deutsche Telekom , Germany Hrvatski Telekom , Croatia Magyar Telekom , Hungary Crnogorski Telekom , Montenegro Makedonski Telekom , North Macedonia Telekom Romania Mobile , Romania Slovak Telekom , Slovakia Telekom Malaysia , Malaysia Telekom Srbija , Serbia Telekom Srpske , Bosnia and Herzegovina Telekom Slovenije , Slovenia Türk Telekom , Turkey See also [ edit ] Telecom (disambiguation) Topics referred to by
38-756: A total volume of €720bn as at May 2023. The Vienna Stock Exchange operates two markets: the Official Market and the Vienna MTF, a multilateral trading facility . The Official Market is the main regulated market operated by the Vienna Stock Exchange. An issuer listing securities in the Official Market must adhere to the requirements of the Austrian Stock Exchange Act. The listing application must be submitted in writing and also must also be signed by one member of
57-674: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages A1 Telekom Austria Group A1 Telekom Austria Group is a provider of a range of fixed-line, broadband Internet, multimedia services, data, and IT systems, wholesale as well as mobile payment services. It is a subsidiary of Mexican telecommunications conglomerate América Móvil since 2014, and its headquarters are in Vienna . The company operates subsidiaries in seven European countries: Austria , Belarus , Bulgaria , Croatia , North Macedonia , Serbia , and Slovenia . Its largest subsidiary
76-619: Is the Austrian telecommunications provider A1 Telekom Austria . Telekom Austria's earliest predecessor, the state-owned PTT agency k.k Post- und Telegraphenverwaltung [ de ] , was formed in 1887 when all telephone and mail services in Austria-Hungary were taken over by the state. After World War I , the Austrian portion of the company became simply Post- und Telegraphenverwaltung (PTV, ÖPT). In 1996, with
95-604: The Vienna Stock Exchange ) is a bourse situated in Vienna , Austria . The exchange owns and operates the Prague Stock Exchange , and holds stakes in energy exchanges and clearing houses . It provides market infrastructure to other exchanges in Central , Eastern , and Southeastern Europe ( Budapest , Zagreb , and Ljubljana ), and collects and distributes stock market data and calculates
114-402: The public switched telephone network becoming Telekom Austria FixNet AG, which was later renamed Telekom Austria TA AG. In doing so, Telekom Austria FixNet AG became a sister company of affiliate Mobilkom Austria AG. Both merged in 2010 to form A1 Telekom Austria . Foreign subsidiaries of Mobilkom Austria were transferred to the holding company, so that A1 Telekom Austria would only deal with
133-447: The Austrian Stock Exchange Act regarding the listing of securities in the Official Market and the accompanying obligations of issuers do not apply to financial instruments included in trading in the Vienna MTF. As such, the Vienna MTF is customarily used by foreign issuers of corporate bonds , small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) issuing equity and expanding young companies. Although the requirements on issuers of securities traded in
152-603: The Austrian market. In 2011, misdemeanours by company directors between 2004 and 2006 became public, erupting into a scandal known as the Telekom Austria Affair . As of the end of 2022, Telekom Austria Group had 17,906 employees and generated about €5 billion in revenues. On 14 November 2017, Telekom Austria Group was rebranded to A1 Telekom Austria Group as part of adopting their one brand strategy. The legal entity Telekom Austria AG still remains. In 2020, all shares of Telecom Liechtenstein (FL1) were sold to
171-503: The Principality. On 23 April 2014 Carlos Slim , owner of America Movil , took control of Telekom Austria by forming a syndicate agreement between ÖIAG and America Movil, spending as much as $ 2 billion to buy out minority shareholders and investing up to 1 billion euros ($ 1.38 billion) into the company. America Movil sees Telekom Austria as a "platform for expansion into Central and Eastern Europe ". Labour representatives boycotted
190-466: The Vienna MTF are lower, issuers still must comply with EU market abuse regulations, which were transposed into Austrian law through the Austrian Stock Exchange Act. Wiener Börse is one of the world's oldest exchanges and was founded in 1771 during the reign of Empress Maria Theresa of Austria in order to provide a market for state issued bonds . She tried to rein in the illegal trade that took place in coffeeshops during that time. On 9 May 1873,
209-488: The Vienna Stock Exchange. The application must include an excerpt not older than four weeks from the Austrian Business Register or equivalent in the case of a foreign issuer, a listing prospectus drawn in line with EU prospectus regulations, a current version of the issuer's articles of association or equivalent and at least one set of current audited financial statements . The requirements of
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#1732801520467228-672: The Wiener Börse sold the Ljubljana Stock Exchange to the Zagreb Stock Exchange ( Zagrebačka burza ). In 2019, it opened a multilateral trading facility (the exchange-regulated "Vienna MTF"), a third market for over-the-counter transactions. In 2020, the Wiener Börse listed for the first time products denominated in the cryptocurrencies Bitcoin and Ethereum , making real-time prices available for trading between 9:15 am - 5:30 pm. In 2023
247-658: The börse bought an 81% stake in Ljubljana Stock Exchange ( Ljubljanske burze ). In 2010, ATVP, the Slovene market regulator restricted the Wiener Börse's voting rights. The rights would be restored only by either purchasing full ownership or no more than 25% stake. The case was taken to the Slovene Supreme Court which upheld the ATVP ruling. The Wiener Börse bought the remaining shares. In 2015,
266-453: The decision on the syndicate agreement at the ÖIAG supervisory board meeting for 12 hours criticising lack of explicit job guarantees. A1 Telekom Austria Group operates the following subsidiaries: A1 Telekom reduced mobile Internet bandwidth in Minsk during 2020 Belarusian protests at the request of Belarusian officials. Vienna Stock Exchange The Wiener Börse AG (also known as
285-424: The latter in 2007). In June 2000, the company invested about 15 million euros to rebrand itself as Jet2Web . However, Jet2Web failed to succeed in the market, because it was perceived as unreliable. The use of the name was discontinued in 2002, and the company name Telekom Austria was revived as the brand name with a new logo. In June 2006, the company was split into the holding company Telekom Austria Group, with
304-440: The most important indices of the region. The Austrian Traded Index (ATX), the leading index of Wiener Börse, tracks the price of its blue chips in real time. The ATX composition is updated every March and September, mainly based on a stock's capitalized free float and trading volumes. The Vienna Stock Exchange also maintains a market for fixed income securities , with more than 13,000 active bonds from 38 countries and
323-558: The passage of the Post Restructuring Act, PTV was restructured as a public corporation , Post-und Telekom Austria AG (PTA AG). Only two years later, the telecommunications sector was fully deregulated and PTA was split, with the telecom side becoming Telekom Austria. The company was fully privatised in 2000 and was listed on the Vienna Stock Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange (it delisted from
342-411: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Telekom . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Telekom&oldid=1229696063 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
361-537: The stock exchange crashed spectacularly ("Der Krach"), signalling the start of the Long Depression . In 1985, Jim Rogers triggered a bull market when he said the Austrian capital market had high potential. He has been notable for his contributions to the Austrian stock market. In 2008, the Wiener Börse agreed to buy the Prague Stock Exchange for an undisclosed amount. In the same year,
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