Solidium


Solidium Oy is Finnish state-owned investment company. Founded in 1991, Solidium's original purpose was to manage the property of SKOP Bank, which went bankrupt in the early 1990s recession. In 2008, the purpose of Solidium was changed to manage the listed minority shareholdings of the Finnish Government. Previously, the government directly owned the stock, and transferring them under a single company was the work of Minister of Trade and Industry Jyri Häkämies. On 30 June 2015, the net asset value of Solidium was EUR 6,854 million.
Aside from Solidium, the government still directly owns shares in three listed companies as a majority shareholder.

Holdings

Solidium took over the state owned shares in 2008 of Kemira, Metso, Outokumpu, Rautaruukki, Sampo, Sponda, Stora Enso and Telia and in 2009 Elisa.
Solidium acquired over 5% of Outotec mining technology company's shares in March 2012 while Goldman Sachs reduced its ownership to less than 5%. 5% is the limit of obligatory stock information note in Finland.
Solidium has bought also Talvivaara mining stocks and sold all shares of Sponda.
Company% of company owned
Elisa Oyj10.0
Kemira Oyj16.7
Metso Oyj13.0
Outokumpu Oyj26.2
Outotec Oyj13.2
SSAB17.1 / 10.1
Sampo Oyj11.9
Stora Enso Oyj12.3
Talvivaara15.2
Tieto Oyj10.0
Nokia Oyj3.3

Finnish state also directly owns shares of certain publicly listed companies, deemed to be ″strategically important″, that are not in Solidium's portfolio. These include Finnair, Fortum, and Neste Oil.

Corporate governance

Solidium Oy managing director is Kari Järvinen. The members of Solidium's Board of Directors are chairman Heikki Bergholm, Markku Hyvärinen, Marketta Kokkonen, Anni Vepsäläinen, and Eero Heliövaara.