Metals Stocks List

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

Metals Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Apr 16 DCO Ducommun Rejects Buyout Offer. Board Says It ‘Significantly Undervalues’ Company.
Apr 16 WIRE Encore Wire Merger Presents Interesting Proposition
Apr 16 DCO Ducommun rejects Albion River's buyout offer; sees value in its Vision 2027 Strategy
Apr 16 DCO Ducommun Incorporated Rejects Unsolicited, Non-Binding Indication of Interest From Albion River
Apr 15 WIRE M&T Bank Reports Q1 Earnings, Joins Snap One, Encore Wire And Other Big Stocks Moving Higher On Monday
Apr 15 WIRE Encore Wire Stock Surges on $4.2 Billion Takeover by Italy’s Prysmian
Apr 15 WIRE Electrical Equipment Company Encore Wire Gets Wired For Takeover In €3.9B Deal
Apr 15 WIRE Goldman Sachs, Charles Schwab And 3 Stocks To Watch Heading Into Monday
Apr 15 WIRE Prysmian to acquire Encore for about €3.9 billion in all cash-deal
Apr 15 WIRE Cable giant Prysmian to buy Encore Wire in $4.2 billion deal
Apr 15 WIRE Encore Wire to Be Acquired by Prysmian for $290.00 Per Share in Cash
Apr 14 CNX 10 Buy-Rated Stocks with Latest Insider Purchases
Apr 12 ATI US Steel Delays Deal With Nippon; Atlas Lithium Secures New Financing; ATI Completes Expansion And More: Friday's Top Mining Stories
Apr 12 CNX Will CNX Resources (CNX) Beat Estimates Again in Its Next Earnings Report?
Apr 12 DCO Ducommun secures two major awards totaling over $50M in revenue
Apr 12 DCO Ducommun Incorporated Announces Award of Major Defense Orders for Raytheon Radar Systems
Apr 11 ATI ATI Celebrates Completion of Most Advanced Materials Finishing Operations
Apr 11 TX Why Ternium Is the World's Best Steel Company
Apr 11 WIRE Is DNOW INC (DNOW) Stock Outpacing Its Industrial Products Peers This Year?
Apr 11 WIRE Why Encore Wire Corporation (NASDAQ:WIRE) Could Be Worth Watching
Metals

A metal (from Greek μέταλλον métallon, "mine, quarry, metal") is a material that, when freshly prepared, polished, or fractured, shows a lustrous appearance, and conducts electricity and heat relatively well. Metals are typically malleable (they can be hammered into thin sheets) or ductile (can be drawn into wires). A metal may be a chemical element such as iron, or an alloy such as stainless steel.
In physics, a metal is generally regarded as any substance capable of conducting electricity at a temperature of absolute zero. Many elements and compounds that are not normally classified as metals become metallic under high pressures. For example, the nonmetal iodine gradually becomes a metal at a pressure of between 40 and 170 thousand times atmospheric pressure. Equally, some materials regarded as metals can become nonmetals. Sodium, for example, becomes a nonmetal at pressure of just under two million times atmospheric pressure.
In chemistry, two elements that would otherwise qualify (in physics) as brittle metals—arsenic and antimony—are commonly instead recognised as metalloids, on account of their predominately non-metallic chemistry. Around 95 of the 118 elements in the periodic table are metals (or are likely to be such). The number is inexact as the boundaries between metals, nonmetals, and metalloids fluctuate slightly due to a lack of universally accepted definitions of the categories involved.
In astrophysics the term "metal" is cast more widely to refer to all chemical elements in a star that are heavier than the lightest two, hydrogen and helium, and not just traditional metals. A star fuses lighter atoms, mostly hydrogen and helium, into heavier atoms over its lifetime. Used in that sense, the metallicity of an astronomical object is the proportion of its matter made up of the heavier chemical elements.Metals comprise 25% of the Earth's crust and are present in many aspects of modern life. The strength and resilience of some metals has led to their frequent use in, for example, high-rise building and bridge construction, as well as most vehicles, many home appliances, tools, pipes, and railroad tracks. Precious metals were historically used as coinage, but in the modern era, coinage metals have extended to at least 23 of the chemical elements.The history of metals is thought to begin with the use of copper about 11,000 years ago. Gold, silver, iron (as meteoric iron), lead, and brass were likewise in use before the first known appearance of bronze in the 5th millennium BCE. Subsequent developments include the production of early forms of steel; the discovery of sodium—the first light metal—in 1809; the rise of modern alloy steels; and, since the end of World War II, the development of more sophisticated alloys.

Browse All Tags