Open joint-stock company
This article is part of a series on | ||||||||
Corporate law | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
By jurisdiction |
||||||||
General corporate forms |
||||||||
Corporate forms by jurisdiction
|
||||||||
Related areas |
||||||||
| ||||||||
A public joint-stock company, abbreviated PJSC (Russian: Публичное акционерное общество, abbreviated Russian: ПАО), is a type of company in many successor states of the Soviet Union, in particular in Russia. Its distinguishing feature is the right of stockholders to trade in stocks without the permission of other stockholders.
Public Stock Societies are somewhat comparable to limited liability partnerships or corporations under US law.
Examples in Russia
- OJSC Russian Railways
- OJSC Rusnano
- OJSC Aeroflot – Russian Airlines
- OJSC Channel One Russia
- OJSC RusHydro
- OJSC Sberbank
- OJSC Gazprom
- OJSC Rosneft
- OJSC Rostelecom
- OJSC Transneft
- OJSC TNK-BP
- OJSC Lukoil
- OJSC Svyazinvest
- OJSC Moscow City Telephone Network
- OJSC VimpelCom
- OJSC United Aircraft Corporation
- OJSC Sukhoi Company
- OJSC Mosenergo
- OJSC Moscow Exchange
- OJSC Novolipetsk Steel
- OJSC Norilsk Nickel
- OJSC Magnit
See also
- Types of business entity#Russia
- Types of business entity in Russia
- Government-owned corporation#Russia
- Unitary enterprise
References
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, March 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.