Alumasc Group

Alumasc Group plc is a United Kingdom-based supplier of building and engineering products, with a specialism in sustainable building products designed to manage energy and water use in the built environment. The company is listed on the FTSE Fledgling Index of the London Stock Exchange under the ticker ALU in the construction and materials sector. It was once the biggest beer barrel manufacturer in Britain.

Alumasc Group
Traded asLSE: ALU[1]
Headquarters
United Kingdom
ProductsBuilding & engineering products[2]
Websitewww.alumasc.co.uk

History

Advertising for cast metal casks being produced by the company in 1952.

The company's original business, Alumasc Limited of Burton Latimer, was in the manufacture of aluminium products. In the 1950s it advertised cast metal beer casks which it claimed were preferred by the brewing industry to wooden casks as being more hygienic, stronger and lower maintenance.[3] In 1960 the firm was taken over by Gold Fields Group.[4] In 1962 it displayed a new type of aluminium beer cask at the Exhibition of Aluminium Goods at the Design Centre in London which was made from pressed sheet aluminium which it claimed was 40% lighter than a die-cast barrel[5] though the company continued to make die-cast products, advertising its expertise in them in the Financial Times in 1970.[6]

1970s

The firm's association with the brewing industry continued into the 1970s when it won an award from the Design Council in 1978 for its Hy-Range Dispense System, which it claimed was the first piece of brewing equipment to win a Design Council award. According to the firm, the equipment enabled the licensed trade to tap and reseal a keg ready for use in seconds.[7]

1980s and 90s

In 1984, the firm's management, led by chairman and chief executive John McCall, bought out the business from Consolidated Gold Fields and by 1986, when it was announced that the firm would be floating on the London Stock Exchange, Alumasc was the biggest beer barrel manufacturer in Britain. The firm ran three divisions at the time, the beer-related products, one making components in a variety of materials for original equipment manufacturers, and another making aluminium building products. In addition, the firm owned Ingersoll Locks which it had acquired from Gold Fields when they decided to concentrate on mining. All had struggled owing to the recession of the early 1980s, particularly the cask business as beer consumption declined, apart from the building products division which had seen strong growth in demand for its aluminium guttering products.[8] The Financial Times noted the varying fortunes of the different divisions and that the majority of the firm's profits still came from the slowest growing part of the firm, the beer-related products.[9]

Profits in the 1980s and 90s were highly variable, first up then down following manufacturing problems with the production of kegs and long period where no orders were placed by customers. The firm continued to be highly dependent on beer related products. In 1995 it agreed to buy the West Midlands engineer Benjamin Priest for £35 million.[10] Profits warnings were made in 1997 and by 1999 the company was loss making.[11]

2000s

In 2006, the company changed its stock market classification from Engineering Products to Construction and Building Products,[12] reflecting the larger size of the building products division. In 2007, Alumasc acquired solar shading firm Levolux.[4]

gollark: Actually, I managed kind of partially applied postfix notation.
gollark: ```haskells x k = k (\x y z -> x y y (z y x)) x unsafePerformIO```
gollark: Haskell's nicer though:```haskells :: t1 -> (((t2 -> t2 -> t3 -> t4) -> t2 -> (t2 -> (t2 -> t2 -> t3 -> t4) -> t3) -> t4) -> t1 -> (IO a -> a) -> t5) -> t5s x k = k z x unsafePerformIO```
gollark: Z expressions or whatever allow for only indent-based handling, actually.
gollark: haskell haskell (haskell) haskell (haskell $ haskell)

References

  1. Alumasc Group PLC. Reuters. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  2. Alumasc Group plc. Bloomburg Business. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  3. Advertising in "The Brewing Industry: A Financial Times Survey", The Financial Times, 7 December 1953, p. 16.
  4. History. Alumasc Group. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  5. "New Aluminium Beer Cask by Alumasc", The Financial Times, 13 February 1962, p. 13.
  6. Advertising in The Financial Times, 19 May 1970, p. 20.
  7. Advertising in The Financial Times, 31 May 1978, p. 13.
  8. "Alumasc Set for Full Listing", Richard Tomkins, The Financial Times, 24 April 1986, p. 32.
  9. "Alumasc Launch on SE Prices It over £18m", Richard Tomkins, The Financial Times, 16 May 1986, p. 28.
  10. "Alumasc Wins Benjamin Priest", Paul Cheeseright, The Financial Times, 15 September 1995, p. 20.
  11. "Alumasc Falls to £9m Loss", The Financial Times, 15 September 1999, p. 34.
  12. ALUMASC GROUP PLC ORD 12.5P. London Stock Exchange. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
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