Plastic Stocks List

Plastic Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Apr 16 BERY Berry Global downgraded at Baird on concerns about oil prices
Apr 16 CMT Core Molding Technologies Presented with a 2024 BRP Gold Supplier Award
Apr 16 ABBV Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) Q1 Earnings Top Estimates
Apr 16 CMT Core Molding Technologies (CMT) Soars 7.5%: Is Further Upside Left in the Stock?
Apr 16 ABBV 12 Best Dividend Stocks with High Upside Potential
Apr 15 ALB Paramount, Etsy, Albemarle among most shorted S&P 500 stocks in March
Apr 15 AVNT International Expansion Drives Growth For This Canadian Cannabis Producer As It Reports Record Q1 Revenue
Apr 15 ABBV Roche reports survival data for new dual-acting lymphoma drug
Apr 14 ABBV AbbVie: Great To Be Proven Wrong - Still Not A Buy
Apr 14 ALB Is Albemarle Stock Going to $156? 1 Wall Street Analyst Thinks So.
Apr 14 ABBV Is AbbVie a Millionaire Maker?
Apr 13 ALB 10 Most Undervalued Value Stocks To Buy Now
Apr 13 ABBV AbbVie keeps Humira market share near 100% despite biosimilars: report
Apr 13 BERY 0.04% earnings growth over 3 years has not materialized into gains for Berry Global Group (NYSE:BERY) shareholders over that period
Apr 12 ABBV What's Going On AbbVie Stock On Friday?
Apr 12 ABBV AbbVie: Bulletproof Fundamentals
Apr 12 ABBV GLP-1s benefit Parkinson’s: Barclays sees implications across biopharma
Apr 12 ABBV AbbVie: Despite The Run, Shares Still Look Attractive, Yielding 3.67%
Apr 12 ABBV Smart Money Is Betting Big In ABBV Options
Apr 12 ABBV AbbVie Announces Late-Breaking Data at AAN Supporting Long-Term Safety and Efficacy of Atogepant (QULIPTA®) for Preventive Treatment of Migraine
Plastic

Plastic is material consisting of any of a wide range of synthetic or semi-synthetic organic compounds that are malleable and so can be molded into solid objects.
Plasticity is the general property of all materials which can deform irreversibly without breaking but, in the class of moldable polymers, this occurs to such a degree that their actual name derives from this specific ability.
Plastics are typically organic polymers of high molecular mass and often contain other substances. They are usually synthetic, most commonly derived from petrochemicals, however, an array of variants are made from renewable materials such as polylactic acid from corn or cellulosics from cotton linters.Due to their low cost, ease of manufacture, versatility, and imperviousness to water, plastics are used in a multitude of products of different scale, including paper clips and spacecraft. They have prevailed over traditional materials, such as wood, stone, horn and bone, leather, metal, glass, and ceramic, in some products previously left to natural materials.
In developed economies, about a third of plastic is used in packaging and roughly the same in buildings in applications such as piping, plumbing or vinyl siding. Other uses include automobiles (up to 20% plastic), furniture, and toys. In the developing world, the applications of plastic may differ — 42% of India's consumption is used in packaging.Plastics have many uses in the medical field as well, with the introduction of polymer implants and other medical devices derived at least partially from plastic. The field of plastic surgery is not named for use of plastic materials, but rather the meaning of the word plasticity, with regard to the reshaping of flesh.
The world's first fully synthetic plastic was bakelite, invented in New York in 1907 by Leo Baekeland who coined the term 'plastics'. Many chemists have contributed to the materials science of plastics, including Nobel laureate Hermann Staudinger who has been called "the father of polymer chemistry" and Herman Mark, known as "the father of polymer physics".The success and dominance of plastics starting in the early 20th century led to environmental concerns regarding its slow decomposition rate after being discarded as trash due to its composition of large molecules. Toward the end of the century, one approach to this problem was met with wide efforts toward recycling.

Browse All Tags