Concrete Stocks List

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

Concrete Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 21 VMC Will Donald Trump Crush These Growth Stocks?
Nov 21 CRH Will Donald Trump Crush These Growth Stocks?
Nov 21 KNF Will Donald Trump Crush These Growth Stocks?
Nov 21 CRH Are Strong Financial Prospects The Force That Is Driving The Momentum In CRH plc's NYSE:CRH) Stock?
Nov 21 CRH CRH price target raised to $113 from $102 at Deutsche Bank
Nov 21 CRH CRH price target raised to $116 from $114 at JPMorgan
Nov 20 CRH CRH Stock: A Deep Dive Into Analyst Perspectives (5 Ratings)
Nov 19 VMC Intervacc Leads The Pack With These 3 Promising Penny Stocks
Nov 18 CRH CRH Expands in California With Dutra Materials Acquisition
Nov 17 CRH Is It Smart To Buy CRH plc (NYSE:CRH) Before It Goes Ex-Dividend?
Nov 16 SMID Smith-Midland Third Quarter 2024 Earnings: EPS: US$0.59 (vs US$0.24 in 3Q 2023)
Nov 15 CRH CRH announces acquisition of Dutra Materials
Nov 15 CRH CRH Continues Expansion in California with Dutra Materials Acquisition
Nov 15 SMID Smith-Midland to Present and Host 1x1 Investor Meetings at the 16th Annual Southwest IDEAS Investor Conference on November 21st
Nov 15 FSTR Is Balchem (BCPC) Stock Outpacing Its Basic Materials Peers This Year?
Nov 15 SMID Smith-Midland GAAP EPS of $0.59
Nov 15 LOMA Analysts Are More Bearish On Loma Negra Compañía Industrial Argentina Sociedad Anónima (NYSE:LOMA) Than They Used To Be
Nov 14 CRH Dan Loeb's Third Point enters Tesla, CVS, exits Uber, Verizon, among top Q3 trades
Nov 14 SMID Smith-Midland Reports Third Quarter 2024 Financial Results
Concrete

Concrete, usually Portland cement concrete, is a composite material composed of fine and coarse aggregate bonded together with a fluid cement (cement paste) that hardens over time—most frequently a lime-based cement binder, such as Portland cement, but sometimes with other hydraulic cements, such as a calcium aluminate cement. It is distinguished from other, non-cementitious types of concrete all binding some form of aggregate together, including asphalt concrete with a bitumen binder, which is frequently used for road surfaces, and polymer concretes that use polymers as a binder.
When aggregate is mixed together with dry Portland cement and water, the mixture forms a fluid slurry that is easily poured and molded into shape. The cement reacts chemically with the water and other ingredients to form a hard matrix that binds the materials together into a durable stone-like material that has many uses. Often, additives (such as pozzolans or superplasticizers) are included in the mixture to improve the physical properties of the wet mix or the finished material. Most concrete is poured with reinforcing materials (such as rebar) embedded to provide tensile strength, yielding reinforced concrete.
Famous concrete structures include the Hoover Dam, the Panama Canal and the Roman Pantheon. The earliest large-scale users of concrete technology were the ancient Romans, and concrete was widely used in the Roman Empire. The Colosseum in Rome was built largely of concrete, and the concrete dome of the Pantheon is the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome. Today, large concrete structures (for example, dams and multi-storey car parks) are usually made with reinforced concrete.
After the Roman Empire collapsed, use of concrete became rare until the technology was redeveloped in the mid-18th century. Worldwide, concrete has overtaken steel in tonnage of material used.

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