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Among the most influential factors affecting the fortunes of aluminum makers like Alcoa is the market price of the metal. Although they have rallied recently, aluminum prices remain nearly 50 percent lower than they were at their peak last year. Aluminum currently sells for about 74 cents per pound, down from record highs of around $1.50 per pound last summer. The Pittsburgh-based company's loss amounted to 47 cents per share for the three months ended in June. During the same period last year, Alcoa
-- the largest U.S. aluminum producer -- earned $546 million, or 66 cents per share. Alcoa's loss from continuing operations in the latest quarter was $312 million, or 32 cents per share. Excluding restructuring charges, that loss would have been 26 cents per share. Revenue tumbled 41 percent to $4.24 billion. Analysts expected Alcoa to lose 38 cents per share on revenue of $3.93 billion, on average, according to a survey by Thomson Reuters. Wall Street typically excludes one-time charges in its estimates. John Tumazos, an industry analyst, said of Alcoa's latest results: "They did good." The company lost considerably less money on ventures in China and Russia than in the past, and it garnered contributions from operations in Iceland and Norway, he said. Alcoa should have a positive cash flow in the third quarter, Tumazos added. Shares of Alcoa gained 41 cents, or 4.3 percent, to $9.87 in after-hours trading following an advance of 5 cents to $9.46 in the regular session. During the quarter, Alcoa stock climbed about 36 percent. ___ On the Net: Alcoa Inc.:
http://www.alcoa.com/global/en/home.asp
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