Aluminum Corporation of China Limited
| Type | Public (SEHK: 2600, NYSE: ACH [1] |
|---|---|
| Industry | Mining, metallurgy |
| Founded | 2001 (Beijing) |
| Headquarters | Beijing, People's Republic of China |
| Key people | Xiong Weiping (President) |
| Products | Aluminum and copper products[2] |
| Total assets | RMB 377.7 billion (2008) |
| Owner(s) | State Council |
| Employees | 107,887 (2008)[3] |
| Website | www.chalco.com.cn www.chinalco.com |
Aluminum Corporation of China Limited, also known as Chalco (SEHK: 2600, NYSE: ACH, SSE: 601600), is a multinational aluminium company headquartered in Beijing, People's Republic of China. It is the world’s second-largest alumina producer (and the only producer in China) and third-largest primary aluminium producer (and the largest producer in China).[4]
Chinalco is principally engaged in the extraction of aluminium oxide, electrolyzation of virgin aluminium and the processing and production of aluminium.
Its primary listing is on the Shanghai Stock Exchange and it is a constituent of the SSE 50 index. It has secondary listings on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange.
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[edit] History
Aluminum Corporation of China (CHINALCO) is a state-backed holding company established to be the primary aluminium producer in the People's Republic of China in 2001.[5] It is the parent company of Aluminum Corporation of China Limited (CHALCO) which is listed on the New York, Hong Kong and Shanghai stock exchanges.[5]
With effect from 10 June 2008, Chalco was added to the Hang Seng Index Constituent Stock (blue chip).[6]
Chinalco is investing $3 billion to begin open-cast mining operations, within three to four years, in Morococha District, Peru. The company plans to extract copper ore from Mount Toromocho.[7]
Chinalco holds a 9% stake in the Anglo-Australian mining company Rio Tinto.[8] Rio Tinto controls large Iron ore reserves in Australia. On June 5, Rio Tinto broke a deal for Chinalco to purchase a larger stake in the company, with support by rival Anglo-Australian mining company BHP Billiton. Rio Tinto is expected to pay a US$195 million breaking fee according to the contract signed earlier by the two parties.[9]
In 2010, Chinalco reported a net profit of ¥778.01 million, a dramatic rise when compared with the company's ¥4.62 billion profit losses from the previous year. The company credits increased prices and effective cost control strategies with the financial turnaround.[10]
During July 2011, Chinalco signed a long-term agreement with Mongolian miner Tavan Tolgoi to import more than 15 million tons of coking coal annually in order to meet increased domestic demand.[11]
[edit] Operations
Chinalco operates its business through three segments: aluminium oxide segment, producing and selling aluminium oxide, aluminium hydroxide and gallium; virgin aluminium, providing virgin aluminium, carbon element products and aluminium alloys, and aluminium processing segment, offering casting products, slab band products, foils, squeezing products, forging products, powder products and die-casting products.
Chinalco's gallium products include gallium metal and gallium oxide.
Chinalco also provides remelted aluminum ingots.
Chinalco products are applied in construction, electricity, packaging, transportation, nondurable consumer goods, hard board material, wire and cable, ceramics, refractory material, laundry, petrochemical, and aerospace industries.
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.nyse.com/listed/ach.html
- ^ http://www.chinalco.com/chinalco/products/copper/
- ^ "Google Finance: Aluminum Corporation of China Limited", accessed August 16, 2009
- ^ Official website. Introduction. Accessed May 26, 2006.
- ^ a b http://www.chalco.com.cn/zl/web/chinalco_en_show.jsp?ColumnID=122
- ^ HANG SENG INDEXES ANNOUNCES INDEX REVIEW RESULTS
- ^ John Simpson (journalist), BBC News, Peru's 'copper mountain' in Chinese hands Accessed June 18, 2008
- ^ Treanor, Jill (February 1, 2009). "Rio Tinto confirms talks over Chinese cash injection". guardion.co.uk. Guardian News and Media Limited. http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/feb/01/rio-tinto-nears-chinalco-deal. Retrieved April 7, 2009.
- ^ Rio Tinto agrees to pay Chinalco break fee - The Australian
- ^ http://thechinaperspective.com/articles/profilealuminum-8840/
- ^ http://thechinaperspective.com/articles/chinalcotoimpor-8841/
[edit] External links
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- Companies listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange
- Companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange
- Companies listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange
- SSE 50 companies
- Hang Seng Index Constituent Stocks
- Hang Seng China Enterprise Index Constitute Stock
- Aluminium companies
- Companies of the People's Republic of China
- Manufacturing companies of the People's Republic of China
- Central-owned enterprises of the People's Republic of China
- Warrants issued in Hong Kong Stock Exchange
- Metal companies of China