Is BlueScope a public company?

What does BlueScope Steel Limited do? BlueScope Steel Limited is an Australian-owned public company that derives its revenue from the manufacture and distribution of steel building products.

What companies does BlueScope own?

Our strong partnerships and networks are built on BlueScope’s most loved and recognised product brands, such as COLORBOND® and ZINCALUME® steels, COLORSTEEL®, BlueScope Zacs®, LYSAGHT® steel building products, Butler® and Varco Pruden® engineered buildings.

Who is BlueScope Steel owned by?

BlueScope Steel became a stand-alone steel company in July 2002 after BHP had announced in 2001 that it was merging with Anglo-African mining house Billiton to form BHPBilliton, and that the company’s steel division would be spun out as separate Australian listed companies.

Is BSL a good buy?

Price-To-Earnings vs Peers: BSL is good value based on its Price-To-Earnings Ratio (3.4x) compared to the peer average (10.1x).

What happened BlueScope Steel?

What does BlueScope Steel do?

A global steel company BlueScope is a flat steel producer for the domestic Australian, New Zealand and US markets, and is a leading international supplier of steel products and solutions, principally focused on the global building and construction industry.

Does BHP still own BlueScope?

BlueScope, formerly a business group within BHP Billiton, became an independent steel company and publicly listed on the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) on Monday 15 July 2002. Important dates in BlueScope’s history are shown below.

Is BlueScope Steel a buy?

AUD 18.61 0.01 0.05% Assuming the 90 days trading horizon and your below-average risk tolerance, our recommendation regarding Bluescope Steel is ‘Strong Sell’.

Where is BlueScope Steel manufactured?

Our steelworks at Port Kembla – in New South Wales’ Illawarra region – is the largest steel production facility in Australia. With an annual production capacity of approximately 3.0 million tonnes of crude steel it manufactures slab, hot rolled coil and plate products.