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Howmet Aerospace

Howmet Aerospace
Leadership team

Mr. Kenneth J. Giacobbe (Exec. VP & CFO)

Ms. Lola Felice Lin (Exec. VP, Corp. Sec., Chief Legal & Compliance Officer)

Products/ Services
Aerospace, Manufacturing, Transportation
Number of Employees
1,000 - 20,000
Headquarters
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Established
1888
Company Registration
SEC CIK number: 0000004281
Net Income
100M - 500M
Revenue
Above - 1B
Social Media
Overview
Location
Summary

Howmet Aerospace Inc. provides advanced engineered solutions for the aerospace and transportation industries in the United States, Japan, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Mexico, Italy, Canada, Poland, China, and internationally. It operates through four segments: Engine Products, Fastening Systems, Engineered Structures, and Forged Wheels. The Engine Products segment offers airfoils and seamless rolled rings primarily for aircraft engines and industrial gas turbines; and rotating parts, as well as structural parts. The Fastening Systems segment produces aerospace fastening systems, as well as commercial transportation, industrial, and other fasteners. The Engineered Structures segment provides titanium ingots and mill products for aerospace and defense applications; and aluminum and nickel forgings, and machined components and assemblies. The Forged Wheels segment offers forged aluminum wheels and related products for heavy-duty trucks and commercial transportation markets. The company was formerly known as Arconic Inc. The company was founded in 1888 and is based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

History

 

Before Alcoa acquisition

Howmet's roots go back to 1926 with the founding of Austenal, a company which manufactured materials for dental appliances. Its founders, Reiner Erdle and Charles Prange worked to improve investment chrome base castings using two separate investments: The first coating, named "protective coat", gave a smooth finish, it was smothered with alcohol binder investment to obtain a correct expansion. This technology replaced gold alloy with vitallium and was popular during the Great Depression.

During the 1930s, Austenal expanded into aircraft engine superchargers with superior castings when General Electric asked for help to improve manufacturing practices for wartime production demands.

In 1958, Howe Sound Company, a metals and mining business, acquired Austenal. In 1959, Howe acquired Michigan Steel Casting Co. , which provided the monolithic shell process, which uses a ceramic shell with thin, strong walls to increase control of the solidification process to produce a sounder casting.

Howe became Howmet in 1965, marking a transition from a mining company to a manufacturer of precision metal products. Howmet in turn was purchased in 1975 by Pechiney, a multinational aluminum company. In 1989, Pechiney purchased the Cercast group of companies, bringing Howmet into the aluminum casting industry.

In 1995, Pechiney sold Howmet to a joint venture between Thiokol and The Carlyle Group. By late 1997 the ownership structure of Howmet had become Thiokol owning 62%, Carlyle 23%, and the public 15%. In 1998, Thiokol changed its name to Cordant Technologies Inc.; by February 1999, Cordant owned 84.7% of Howmet.

As Alcoa Inc. and Arconic Inc.

In 2000, Cordant sold its stake in Howmet to Alcoa, which placed Howmet into its Alcoa Industrial Components unit. In 2004 Howmet was part of a merger that created Alcoa Investment Casting and Forged Products unit. In 2007, Howmet was renamed Alcoa Howmet as a division of the newly formed Alcoa Power and Propulsion unit.

On November 1, 2016, Alcoa Inc. spun off its bauxite, alumina, and aluminum operations to a new company called Alcoa Corp. Alcoa Inc. was renamed Arconic Inc., and retained the operations in aluminum rolling , aluminum plate, precision castings, and aerospace and industrial fasteners. Its focus became turning aluminum and other lightweight metals into engineered products such as turbine blades for sectors including aerospace and automotive.On January 31, 2017, the hedge fund Elliott Management Corporation launched a proxy contest against Arconic. Elliott publicly called for the firing of Arconic's CEO, Klaus Kleinfeld, citing the company's lackluster stock performance, missed profit forecasts and inefficient spending. On April 17, 2017, Kleinfeld resigned as chairman and CEO by mutual agreement with the board of Arconic, after sending an unauthorized letter to Elliott.On February 8, 2019, Arconic announced that it would split into two separate businesses. Arconic Inc. would be renamed Howmet Aerospace Inc. and a new company, Arconic Corporation, would be set up and spun out. Arconic Corporation will be focused on rolled aluminium products and Howmet Aerospace on engineered products. The separation was scheduled to become effective on April 1, 2020.

Key Team

Mr. Neil E. Marchuk (Exec. VP & Chief Human Resource Officer)

Mr. Michael Niem Chanatry (VP & Chief Commercial Officer)

Mr. Paul Thomas Luther Jr. (VP of Investor Relations)

Ms. Esra Ozer (Chief Communications Officer and VP of Inclusion & Diversity)

Mr. Randall Scheps (Pres of Forged Wheels)

Mr. Vitaliy V. Rusakov (Pres of Fastening Systems)

Ms. Margaret S. Lam Esq. (Assistant Sec., Associate Gen. Counsel and Chief Securities & Governance Counsel)

References
Howmet Aerospace
Leadership team

Mr. Kenneth J. Giacobbe (Exec. VP & CFO)

Ms. Lola Felice Lin (Exec. VP, Corp. Sec., Chief Legal & Compliance Officer)

Products/ Services
Aerospace, Manufacturing, Transportation
Number of Employees
1,000 - 20,000
Headquarters
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Established
1888
Company Registration
SEC CIK number: 0000004281
Net Income
100M - 500M
Revenue
Above - 1B
Social Media