Alfred W. Zollar serves as Independent Director of the Company. Mr. Zollar has been an Executive Partner at Siris Capital Group, LLC, a private equity firm, since February 2014. Mr. Zollar served as General Manager of the Tivoli Software division of International Business Machines Corporation, a provider of information technology, products and services, from July 2004 to January 2011. He held numerous other roles at IBM, including General Manager of IBM iSeries and General Manager of IBM Lotus Software. Mr. Zollar is a member of the PSEG and The Bank of New York Mellon audit committees, the Chair of The Bank of New York Mellon technology committee, the Chair of the PSEG finance committee and a member of the PSEG fossil and nuclear generation operations oversight committees. Mr. Zollar served as a director of The Chubb Corporation from 2001 until 2016 and of Red Hat, Inc. from 2018 until 2019.
As the Independent Director of Nasdaq Inc, the total compensation of Alfred Zollar at Nasdaq Inc is $299,220. There are 13 executives at Nasdaq Inc getting paid more, with Adena Friedman having the highest compensation of $13,869,300.
Over the last 21 years, insiders at Nasdaq Inc have traded over $4,671,120,104 worth of Nasdaq Inc stock and bought 1,445,010 units worth $33,764,304 . The most active insiders traders include Glenn H Hutchins, Seller, Lpthoma Bravo Ugp, ..., and Dubai Ltd Investment Corp O.... On average, Nasdaq Inc executives and independent directors trade stock every 17 days with the average trade being worth of $20,635,711. The most recent stock trade was executed by Bradley J Peterson on 9 August 2024, trading 40,000 units of NDAQ stock currently worth $2,711,600.
welcome to the new nasdaq. where capital market logistics are solved by people, products and services that are as ambitious as you are. in 1971, the microprocessor was born. nasdaq wasted no time capitalizing on the new technology by bringing all-electronic trading to the market. later in the decade, this provided the likes of apple and microsoft with the means to raise capital that was previously unavailable to them. sixteen years later on the other side of the atlantic, om became the world’s first publicly traded and listed exchange company. in 2007, nasdaq merged with omx with a vision to be a single company with a single mission: deliver the kind of resources that would solve the logistics of the global capital markets. that vision has served us well. so well, in fact, that nasdaq transformed itself from a u.s.-based equities exchange to a diversified technology provider for thousands of global firms. today, we’re the leading technology and information services provider to th
Nasdaq Inc executives and other stock owners filed with the SEC include: