Crossword clues for alcoa
alcoa
- Reynolds rival
- Reynolds Metals parent company
- Reynolds merger partner
- Reynolds competitor
- Reynolds buyer of 2000
- Producer of material for bats
- Pittsburgh-based metals giant
- Pittsburgh-based metals company
- Pittsburgh-based metal producer
- Pittsburgh-based metal giant
- North America's largest producer of aluminum
- Name in kitchen wrap, once
- Mining-manufacturing giant based in Pittsburgh
- Metals industry acronym
- Metals company hidden in "metal coating"
- Metal-processing biggie
- Metal wrap giant
- Metal industry giant
- Metal industry biggie
- Metal industry acronym
- Metal giant founded in Pittsburgh in 1888
- Maker of silver linings?
- Maker of metal beer bottles
- Maker of many market rolls
- Maker of many kitchen rolls
- Major scrap producer
- Major metal-producing corporation
- Major metal maker
- Major manufacturer of soda can materials
- Major maker of tire rims
- Major maker of can material
- Major beverage-can maker
- Major aluminum producer
- Kitchen wrap giant
- It was removed from the Dow 30 the same year Nike was added
- It was founded as the Pittsburgh Reduction Company
- It merged with Reynolds in 2000
- Heavy hitter in the light metals industry
- Giant of metal?
- Giant of metal hailing from Pittsburgh
- Fortune 500 company that's a major miner
- Fortune 500 company based in Pittsburgh
- Foil-making company
- Foil firm
- Foil company
- Foil brand
- Dow Jones Industrial Average company until 2013
- Cut-Rite wax paper company
- Company with a can-do attitude?
- Company that's a major miner
- Company that produces wrap sheets?
- Company that markets Reynolds Wrap
- Company that developed the first aluminum teakettle
- Company that "can't wait"
- Company removed from the Dow 30 in 2013
- Company name that aptly begins with a periodic table symbol
- Company known for lightweight metals
- Company begun as the Pittsburgh Reduction Company
- City near Knoxville
- City in Tenn
- Big supplier to Boeing
- Big producer of beverage cans
- Big name in wraps
- Big name in soda cans and foil
- Big name in metal wrap
- Big name in metal
- Big maker of food cans
- Big aluminum producer
- Big aluminum company
- Aluminum maker
- Giant automaker supplier
- Early TV drama sponsor
- "The ___Hour" (50's drama series)
- Big name in the metals industry
- Foil giant
- Major can maker
- Major maker of beverage cans
- Big name in kitchen foil
- Foil maker
- Big can producer
- Big name in can-making
- Reynolds Wrap maker
- Major company in metallic products
- Big name in siding
- Company that took over Reynolds Metals in 2000
- Maker of Reynolds Wrap foil
- Big maker of metal products
- Metal giant whose stock symbol is AA
- Big name in metal foil
- Big name in wrapping
- It acquired Reynolds Metals in 2000
- Foil-making giant
- Dow Jones industrial with the N.Y.S.E. symbol "AA"
- Its symbol is AA on the New York Stock Exchange
- Name in kitchen foil
- Metals giant in the Dow Jones industrial average
- Acronym on the S&P 500
- Giant in lightweight metals
- Major manufacturer of soda cans
- N.Y.S.E. acronym
- Big foil maker
- Tennessee city
- City in Tenn.
- Big name in kitchen wraps
- Big name in foil
- Aluminum manufacturer
- Aluminum giant
- Kitchen wrap brand
- Tinfoil brand
- Wrap maker
- Dow Jones Industrials stock
- Company dropped from the Dow in 2013
- Big name in aluminum products
- Big name in aluminum processing
- Wrap initialism
- Wrap giant
- Stock in the Dow since 1959
- Reynolds Wrap producer
- Reynolds Wrap company
- One of the 30 companies that makes up the Dow Jones Industrial Average
- One of the 30 companies that comprise the Dow Jones Industrial Average
- One of the 30 companies comprising the Dow Jones Industrial Average
- Name in lightweight metals
- Manufacturer of foil
- Major US metal processor
- Giant in foil
- City south of Knoxville
- Big name in metals
- Big name in lightweight metals
- Big bauxite miner
- Aluminum company since 1888
- Aluminum brand name
- Wrap star
- Tinfoil maker
- Tinfoil giant
- Tennessee industrial city
- Tennessee aluminum town
- Reynolds' rival
- Reynolds Wrap owner
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 3857
Land area (2000): 13.793302 sq. miles (35.724486 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.979540 sq. miles (2.536998 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 14.772842 sq. miles (38.261484 sq. km)
FIPS code: 00540
Located within: Tennessee (TN), FIPS 47
Location: 35.803850 N, 83.977500 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 37701
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Alcoa
Wikipedia
Alcoa Inc. (from Aluminum Company of America) is an American public company best known for its work with lightweight metals and advanced manufacturing techniques. The world's third largest producer of aluminum, behind Chinalco and Rusal, the company has corporate headquarters in New York City. From its operational base in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in the United States, Alcoa conducts operations in 30 countries. It is one of the world's largest lightweight metal manufacturers of products made of aluminum, titanium and nickel. Alcoa’s products are used worldwide in aircraft, automobiles, commercial transportation, packaging, building and construction, oil and gas, defense, and industrial applications. Alcoa's products include fastening systems for the Airbus A380 jet, sheets for Ford's F-150 truck, and the first aluminum fan blade for Pratt & Whitney jet engines. Alcoa also supplies aerospace-grade aluminum produced in South Korea to Samsung Electronics for its Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S7 model line-up. Alcoa is a major producer of primary aluminum, fabricated aluminum, and alumina combined, through its participation in all major aspects of the industry: technology, mining, refining, smelting, fabricating, and recycling. As of 2015, the company has $36.7 billion in assets and 60,000 employees.
Its operations are made up of three business groups: Engineered Products and Solutions (EPS); Global Rolled Products (GRP); and Global Primary Products (GPP). EPS consists of five businesses: aerospace, gas turbines, building and construction, and commercial transportation. EPS mainly concerns the manufacturing operations, such as production of airfoils, fasteners and architectural systems. The GRP segment possesses two units: Global Packaging (producing beverage containers, industrial packing and foil); and Aerospace, Transportation and Industrial, which manufactures aluminum plates and sheets for these markets. The GPP manages the commodity segment, wherein the mining, refining, smelting and energy operations are run. The company's largest business unit, GRP, generated 31% of its revenue in 2014, while the EPS business made up 25%. The primary metals unit, or GPP, accounted for 28% of revenue, while the production of alumina contributed the remainder.
As of 2016, Alcoa will be split into two publicly traded entities, an aluminum commodity business and a higher-value manufacturing operations company. The former will keep the Alcoa name, while the latter's name is Arconic. While the aluminum company will possess five business units including bauxite and aluminum, the second entity's portfolio will comprise EPS, GRP and Transportation and Construction Solutions (TCS). The split is to be finalised by mid 2016. The "new Alcoa" consists of 64 facilities, a staff of roughly 17000 and a yearly revenue of $13.2 billion for 2014. The second company spans 157 sites and employs about 43000 workers, having a comparative revenue of $14.5 billion.
As of 2007, the company has undergone a divestment from primary aluminum, focusing on higher-profit value added metal products, such as aluminum sheets and titanium castings instead. Since that year, Alcoa has closed or sold 1.3 million tons of its smelting capacity (and will continue to do so), according to the Wall Street Journal. The change in strategy has produced a favourable turnaround, with the company seeing its best operating results since 2008, with a net profit of $368 million in 2014.
Alcoa owns several businesses, such as Kawneer and Howmet Castings. Rank Group Limited, a New Zealand-based company bought Alcoa's Packaging and Consumer businesses for $2.7 billion. The sale was announced on December 21, 2007, and closed in the first quarter of 2008. Alcoa was a member of the Dow Jones Industrial Average until 2013, when it was replaced by Nike.
Alcoa is the company formerly known as Aluminum Company of America.
Alcoa may also refer to:
Usage examples of "alcoa".
That firm, the third largest contributor to Bush’s campaign, was able to work a loophole into Texas environmental regulations that allowed Alcoa to emit 60,000 tons of sulfur dioxide each year.
Perhaps that’s because he receives an annual pension from Alcoa of $926,000.
Paul O’Neill’s Stock Holdings Are Detailed, The Nation, “The Man from Alcoa,” William Greider, July 16, 2001.
That firm, the third largest contributor to Bush's campaign, was able to work a loophole into Texas environmental regulations that allowed Alcoa to emit 60,000 tons of sulfur dioxide each year.
Perhaps that's because he receives an annual pension from Alcoa of $926,000.
Paul O'Neill's Stock Holdings Are Detailed, The Nation, "The Man from Alcoa," William Greider, July 16, 2001.
Also from Robert Stone at AT&T, John Moore at Alcoa, Donald Lee at Arco.
We used both, and it is our understanding that we used more Alcoa than they sold for any other project in Florida up to this time.