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SMALL BUSINESS
Alcoa Posts Surprise Profit; Shares Spike
AP
PITTSBURGH (Oct. 8) - Alcoa Inc., the largest U.S. aluminum
producer, on Wednesday said it returned to profitability after
three consecutive quarterly losses, helped by cost-cutting and
rising orders from automakers and other big manufacturers.
The Pittsburgh-based company forecast 11 percent growth in
global aluminum demand in the second half of 2009, with shipments
appearing to climb and distributors replenishing low inventories.
Alcoa earned $77 million, or 8 cents per share, for the three
months ended Sept. 30. During the same period last year, the
company earned $268 million, or 33 cents per share.
Revenue tumbled 40 percent to $4.6 billion from a year earlier,
but was up from the second quarter this year.
The latest results reflected cost-cutting by Alcoa. The company
was forced to slash jobs, sell businesses and curb production as
aerospace, automotive and construction industries cut their orders
late last year amid the global economic downturn. That pushed up
stockpiles and forced down prices.
But just last month, Alcoa boosted its annual forecast for
global aluminum consumption, citing stronger demand from China.
Excluding restructuring charges, Alcoa's earnings in the latest
quarter amounted to 4 cents per share, easily beating expectations
of a loss of 9 cents on revenue of $4.55 billion. Wall Street
typically excludes one-time charges in its estimates.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-10-07 16:08:53
COMMENTS ( 4 )
Most people are underemployed, underpaid and have fewer hours. Employers are waiting to see if the government will tax more than they can handle, and then not employ people.
Cost per barrel decreases, yet energy costs skyrocket, food prices continue to rise, and so on. The only thing that decreases is most people's income.
Too bad we're not all in Congress and just vote ourselves raises, have great health insurance and retirement, what a life!