Glass Fiber Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Glass Fiber stocks.

Glass Fiber Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 10 CE Celanese Corporation (NYSE:CE) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 10 CE Celanese Corp (CE) Q1 Earnings: Misses EPS Estimates, Reports Incremental Revenue Growth
May 10 OC Installed Building (IBP) Tops on Q1 Earnings & Net Revenues
May 10 CE Valvoline's (VVV) Earnings and Revenues Beat Estimates in Q2
May 10 CE Q1 2024 Celanese Corp Earnings Call
May 9 CE Celanese Corporation (CE) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 9 OC Primoris (PRIM) Q1 Earnings & Revenues Top, Up Y/Y, Stock Rise
May 9 OC Louisiana-Pacific (LPX) Q1 Earnings & Sales Beat, Guidance Up
May 9 OC Earnings Estimates Rising for Owens Corning (OC): Will It Gain?
May 9 CE Celanese Receives American Chemistry Council’s 2024 Sustainability Leadership Award for Achievements in Circularity
May 9 OC Owens Corning Inc (OC) is Attracting Investor Attention: Here is What You Should Know
May 9 OC If You Invested $1000 in Owens Corning a Decade Ago, This is How Much It'd Be Worth Now
May 9 CE Celanese's (CE) Q1 Earnings Surpass Estimates, Sales Lag
May 8 CE Celanese (CE) Reports Q1 Earnings: What Key Metrics Have to Say
May 8 CE Celanese beats quarterly profit estimates as demand picks up
May 8 CE Celanese Non-GAAP EPS of $2.08 beats by $0.17, revenue of $2.61B misses by $70M
May 8 CE Celanese Corporation Reports First Quarter Earnings
May 8 OC TopBuild (BLD) Q1 Earnings Top, Net Sales Miss, View Up
May 8 OC Arcosa, Inc. (ACA) Hit a 52 Week High, Can the Run Continue?
May 7 CE Celanese Q1 2024 Earnings Preview
Glass Fiber

Glass fiber (or glass fibre) is a material consisting of numerous extremely fine fibers of glass.
Glassmakers throughout history have experimented with glass fibers, but mass manufacture of glass fiber was only made possible with the invention of finer machine tooling. In 1893, Edward Drummond Libbey exhibited a dress at the World's Columbian Exposition incorporating glass fibers with the diameter and texture of silk fibers. Glass fibers can also occur naturally, as Pele's hair.
Glass wool, which is one product called "fiberglass" today, was invented in 1932–1933 by Games Slayter of Owens-Illinois, as a material to be used as thermal building insulation. It is marketed under the trade name Fiberglas, which has become a genericized trademark. Glass fiber when used as a thermal insulating material, is specially manufactured with a bonding agent to trap many small air cells, resulting in the characteristically air-filled low-density "glass wool" family of products.
Glass fiber has roughly comparable mechanical properties to other fibers such as polymers and carbon fiber. Although not as rigid as carbon fiber, it is much cheaper and significantly less brittle when used in composites. Glass fibers are therefore used as a reinforcing agent for many polymer products; to form a very strong and relatively lightweight fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) composite material called glass-reinforced plastic (GRP), also popularly known as "fiberglass". This material contains little or no air or gas, is more dense, and is a much poorer thermal insulator than is glass wool.

Browse All Tags