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Norwegian law requires publicly listed corporations to have at least 40 percent women on their boards of directors.
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That hasn't stopped U.S. investors from gobbling up respectable NYSE-listed Asian corporations.
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Exchanges are over 200 years old in the US, but in the past 10 or 15 years they have gone from mutually owned companies to listed public corporations, usually after several acquisitions.
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Just a few of the corporations listed included Exxon Mobil, Apple, Microsoft and Wal-Mart, along with several politicians' offices.
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Although their decision has direct implications only for corporations listed on Swiss exchanges, it is likely to prove inspirational for shareholder activists around the world.
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According to Barter News Weekly, almost one-third of all small businesses in the U.S. and 65 percent of corporations listed on the NYSE are involved in some form of bartering.
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In another big policy change, the IRS said in June that it will begin routinely demanding corporations' "tax accrual" work papers for "listed" shelters.
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The Mitsubishi group, for instance, consists of several dozen major corporations that, though they often behave like divisions within a single American conglomerate, are all separately listed.
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