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dotterbolags

Dotterbolags are subsidiaries within corporate groups. A dotterbolag is a separate legal entity that is owned or controlled by a parent company, usually called moderbolag. Control is typically achieved when the parent holds more than 50 percent of voting shares or otherwise has the ability to appoint the majority of the board.

Each dotterbolag has its own legal identity, assets, and liabilities. The parent and the subsidiaries are not

Regulatory framework: In Sweden dotterbolags are governed by the Aktiebolagslagen (the Swedish Companies Act) and the

Tax and governance: Groups may optimize taxation through consolidated reporting and intercompany arrangements, subject to transfer

automatically
liable
for
each
other's
obligations.
The
group
nonetheless
reports
consolidated
financial
statements
that
combine
the
dotterbolags'
results
with
the
parent’s
figures,
for
purposes
of
transparency
and
taxation.
Årsredovisningslagen
(Annual
Accounts
Act).
Subsidiaries
must
maintain
separate
accounting
records
and
file
annual
reports;
larger
groups
may
require
external
auditing
and
consolidated
accounts
under
IFRS
or
Swedish
GAAP
(K2/K3).
pricing
rules.
Subsidiaries
enable
risk
isolation,
resource
sharing,
and
strategic
investment,
but
require
governance
to
handle
cross-border
compliance
and
intercompany
arrangements.