The economic apocalypse that we've been suffering has, to
put it mildly, been unpleasant. But on Wednesday,
aluminum producer
Alcoa (NYSE: AA), earnings season's lead-off
hitter for Dow components, found all manner and means to beat
the pants off its immediately prior quarter. The company has
set the bar pretty high for those that will follow it.
By watching costs like a hawk, management was able to
surprisingly generate net income for the quarter to $77
million, or $0.08 a share, versus a net loss of $454 million,
or $0.47 a share in the immediately preceding quarter. For
the quarter ending in September 2008, however, the company
earned $268 million, or $0.33 per share.
But to my way of thinking, the quarter-to-quarter
improvement speaks volumes about successfully reducing costs
early enough to make a meaningful difference in results. The
company was also helped by the $520 million it received from
a temporary stake in
Rio Tinto (NYSE: RTP).
For instance, Alcoa now numbers about 63,000 employees,
down 20,000 from the start of its "Cash Sustainability
Program." Beyond that, the company is doing wonders in
getting ahead of its targeted goals for the program. Its
overhead savings have already reached 188% of the full year's
target for this year, while procurement savings and a
lowering of the working capital base are both way ahead of
plan.
Looking at the results for the specific segments, Alumina,
Primary Metals, and Flat-Rolled Products all improved
substantially from the second quarter on the basis of
strengthening markets -- including the automotive sector --
and improved pricing. In fact, the only laggard was
Engineered Products and Solutions, where earnings slid 15%
quarter-over-quarter in part due to aerospace destocking --
excluding
commercial producerslike
Boeing (NYSE: BA) -- along with a soft gas
turbine market.
The company also noted that there are signs in the second
half of this year that key markets it serves are
strengthening. So we have super-strong results from the first
of the major companies to report. We'll now have to await a
confirmation of an improving economy from
otherDow Jones Industrial members like
Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT),
DuPont (NYSE: DD), and see how Alcoa's
competitors like
Century Aluminum (Nasdaq: CENX) and
Kaiser Aluminum (Nasdaq: KALU) fared.
As for Alcoa, I suggest strongly that the company deserves
Foolish attention. I frankly am amazed by its improvement,
and if I hadn't just written about it, I could be a buyer.
But I can't, and that's as it should be. You
can,however, purchase the company's stock.
Alcoa is adorned by four stars as provided by
Motley Fool CAPSplayers.
I'm here to suggest that you add your vote to the
company's
assessment.
This article was originally published as
Alcoa Breaks Its Slumpon
Fool.com
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