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To: JohnG who wrote (37307)7/27/1999 1:06:00 PM
From: SpudFarmer  Respond to of 152472
 
John G: Gee, sounds familar, but your poster is more detailed and added a few more good points. Thanks. It is comforting. I don't Yahoo. Maybe I should.



To: JohnG who wrote (37307)7/27/1999 3:16:00 PM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 152472
 
This Could Be Interesting, (Vodofone?)>

DJ Ericsson May Choose Non-Swede As Long-Term CEO

By Rod Stone

STOCKHOLM (Dow Jones)--Now that it has a medium-term management arrangement in place, Swedish
telecommunications group Telefon AB LM Ericsson (ERICY) may wait a few years before appointing a
long-term chief
executive.

Company watchers expect Ericsson's new president, Kurt Hellstroem, to take over the chief executive post
next year
from Lars Ramqvist, but this will last for only two or three years. In a break with tradition, Ericsson may
look overseas
for a longer-term CEO, who would probably be based in London.

Last Friday, Ericsson Chairman Lars Ramqvist - who returned as CEO after the ousting of Sven-Christer
Nilsson on
July 7 - said Hellstroem may take over the CEO position as well if the company's profits start improving.
Ramqvist said
he expects to remain CEO - a position he held from 1990 to March 1998 - for at least six months.

"While Hellstroem has said he's going to stay for a long time, I'm not so sure," said one Ericsson watcher in
Stockholm.
"He's 55 years of age and I think Ericsson will possibly be looking for another CEO in two or three years
time."

Paul Hansson of Myrberg Brokerage in Stockholm said he sees Hellstroem's appointment as president as a
medium-term arrangement lasting perhaps three years. He said Ericsson could look overseas for a candidate
that may
take both president and CEO positions or, alternatively, just the CEO role with Hellstroem remaining as
president.

"Ericsson has stated it is looking for a longer-term solution. I imagine they are actively looking for another
candidate to
be the long-term solution," said one analyst with a major European bank. He said non-Swedes are likely to
be
considered for the role.

London Base May Attract Foreign Players

So far the rumor mill has tipped Jan-Aake Kark, currently president and CEO of Swedish state telecoms
group Telia AB
(S.TLA), as a possible long-term candidate. Telia, though, has denied this.

Kark was mentioned because he was previously head of Ericsson Microwave Systems and will move to
deputy CEO
once Telia's merger with Norway's Telenor ASA (Y.TLN) goes through. The top job at Telia/Telenor will
be taken by
Telenor's CEO, Tormod Hermansen.

Executive search professionals reckon a company of Ericsson's stature would be able to attract high-flying
candidates
from outside Sweden.

"As we've seen recently at Hewlett Packard, it's not uncommon for companies to go outside for chief
executives," said a
London-based headhunter specializing in the telecoms sector.

"Ericsson would attract good people as it has a great brand name and there are some candidates out there
that could fill
that role," he added.

Analysts said the candidate will definitely need experience in the telecom industry but not necessarily
exposure to new
data-communications technologies. "Ericsson will be looking for an international-type manager with an
international
network of contacts," said one analyst.

Any eventual successor will, like Hellstroem, probably be based at Ericsson's new executive office at St.
James's Square
in London, which opens in September. Hellstroem will reside in London but continue to have an office in the
Swedish
capital, an Ericsson spokeswoman said.

An international candidate based in London may be able to bypass Sweden's high taxes, headhunters said.

Ericsson's most pressing employment issue is the replacement of Chief Financial Officer Carl Wilhelm Ros,
who left
earlier this month. The appointment is a key issue for Hellstroem, said the spokeswoman.