Compare · ASTE vs CMCO
ASTE vs CMCO
Side-by-side comparison of Astec Industries Inc. (ASTE) and Columbus McKinnon Corporation (CMCO): market cap, price performance, sector, and recent activity on the wire.
Summary
- Both ASTE and CMCO operate in Construction/Ag Equipment/Trucks (Industrials), so they compete in similar markets.
- ASTE is the larger of the two at $1.20B, about 2.6x CMCO ($454.9M).
- Over the past year, ASTE is up 28.5% and CMCO is up 4.0% - ASTE leads by 24.5 points.
- CMCO has been more active in the news (33 items in the past 4 weeks vs 16 for ASTE).
- CMCO has more recent analyst coverage (6 ratings vs 3 for ASTE).
- Company
- Astec Industries Inc.
- Columbus McKinnon Corporation
- Price
- $51.19-1.74%
- $15.49-2.21%
- Market cap
- $1.20B
- $454.9M
- 1M return
- -16.83%
- +4.95%
- 1Y return
- +28.51%
- +3.96%
- Industry
- Construction/Ag Equipment/Trucks
- Construction/Ag Equipment/Trucks
- Exchange
- NASDAQ
- NASDAQ
- IPO
- 1986
- 1996
- News (4w)
- 16
- 33
- Recent ratings
- 3
- 6
Astec Industries Inc.
Astec Industries, Inc. designs, engineers, manufactures, and markets equipment and components used primarily in road building and related construction activities in the United States and internationally. The company's Infrastructure Solutions segment designs, engineers, manufactures, and markets asphalt plants and related components, heaters, concrete dust control systems, asphalt pavers, vaporizers, concrete material handling systems, screeds, heat recovery units, paste back-fill plants, asphalt storage tanks, hot oil heaters, bagging plants, fuel storage tanks, industrial and asphalt burners and systems, custom batch plants, material transfer vehicles, soil stabilizing-reclaiming machinery, blower trucks and trailers, milling machines, soil remediation plants, wood chippers and grinders, pump trailers, concrete batch plants, control systems, liquid terminals, storage equipment and related parts, construction and retrofits, polymer plants, and concrete mixers, as well as offers engineering and environmental permitting services. This segment offers its products to asphalt producers, highway and heavy equipment contractors, ready mix concrete producers, contractors in the construction and demolition recycling markets, and governmental agencies. Its Materials Solutions segment designs and manufactures crushing equipment, track-mounted systems, bulk material handling solutions, vibrating equipment, screening equipment, electrical control centers, modular relocatable stationary plants, conveying equipment, plant automation products, mobile portable plants, and mineral processing equipment, as well as provides consulting and engineering services. The company has a strategic partnership with CarbonCure Technologies Inc. to offer solution for concrete production. Astec Industries, Inc. was founded in 1972 and is based in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Columbus McKinnon Corporation
Columbus McKinnon Corporation designs, manufactures, and markets intelligent motion solutions to ergonomically move, lift, position, and secure materials worldwide. The company offers electric, air-powered, lever, and hand hoists; hoist trolleys, explosion-protected hoists, custom engineered hoists, and winches; crane systems, such as crane components, crane kits, enclosed track rail systems, mobile and workstation cranes, jib cranes, lift assists, and fall protection systems; rigging equipment comprising below-the-hook lifting devices, shackles, chains and chains accessories, forestry and hand tools, lifting slings, lashing systems, clamps, and tie-downs and load binders; rotary unions and swivel joints; and mechanical and electromechanical actuators. It also provides power and motion technology products, including AC motor controls and line regenerative systems, automation and diagnostics, brakes, cable and festoon systems, collision avoidance systems, conductor bar systems, DC motor and magnet control systems, elevator drives, inverter duty motors, mining drives, pendant pushbutton stations, radio controls, and wind inverters; power delivery subsystems; overhead aluminum light rail workstations; and sanitary and vertical elevation, fabric and modular belt conveyors, and flexible chain conveyor systems, as well as pallet system conveyors. The company serves market verticals, including general industries, mobile industries, energy and utilities, process industries, industrial automation, construction and infrastructure, food processing, entertainment, life sciences, consumer packaged goods, and e-commerce/supply chain/warehousing. It offers its products to end users directly, as well as through distributors, independent crane builders, material handling specialists and integrators, government agencies, original equipment manufacturers, and engineering procurement and construction firms. The company was founded in 1875 and is headquartered in Buffalo, New York.
Latest ASTE
- Director Winford James Murphy Jr was granted 6 shares, increasing direct ownership by 0.06% to 10,514 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Shannon Patrick S was granted 15 shares, increasing direct ownership by 0.15% to 9,781 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Jackson Jeffrey T was granted 21 shares, increasing direct ownership by 0.18% to 11,909 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Knoll Linda I. was granted 6 shares, increasing direct ownership by 0.04% to 14,495 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Jain Nalin was granted 6 shares, increasing direct ownership by 0.05% to 12,932 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Howell Mary L was granted 6 shares, increasing direct ownership by 0.03% to 20,231 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Gliebe Mark Joseph was granted 6 shares, increasing direct ownership by 0.05% to 12,918 units (SEC Form 4)
- Chief Executive Officer Merwe Jaco Van Der was granted 121 shares, increasing direct ownership by 0.11% to 113,237 units (SEC Form 4)
- GROUP PRESIDENT Norris Michael Paul was granted 20 shares, increasing direct ownership by 0.09% to 22,425 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Cook Tracey H was granted 15 shares, increasing direct ownership by 0.07% to 20,240 units (SEC Form 4)
Latest CMCO
- Director Aghili Aziz converted options into 3,283 shares, increasing direct ownership by 20% to 19,536 units (SEC Form 4)
- Columbus McKinnon to Present at Upcoming Wells Fargo Industrials & Materials Conference
- SEC Form 4 filed by Sr VP, Gen'l Counsel & Sec Korman Alan S
- SEC Form 4 filed by Executive VP Finance, CFO Rustowicz Gregory P
- President Americas Chintapalli Appal covered exercise/tax liability with 491 shares, decreasing direct ownership by 1% to 36,175 units (SEC Form 4) (for withholding tax)
- Sr VP, Gen'l Counsel & Sec Korman Alan S covered exercise/tax liability with 552 shares, decreasing direct ownership by 1% to 49,413 units (SEC Form 4) (tax withholding)
- Sr VP Information Services&CDO Paradowski Mark R covered exercise/tax liability with 472 shares, decreasing direct ownership by 2% to 30,573 units (SEC Form 4) to satisfy withholding tax
- Sr. VP, Business Integration Adams Jon covered exercise/tax liability with 296 shares, decreasing direct ownership by 4% to 7,898 units (SEC Form 4) to cover withholding tax
- President & CEO Wilson David J. covered exercise/tax liability with 4,863 shares, decreasing direct ownership by 3% to 182,434 units (SEC Form 4) (withholding tax)
- Executive VP Finance, CFO Rustowicz Gregory P covered exercise/tax liability with 1,189 shares, decreasing direct ownership by 1% to 91,875 units (SEC Form 4) (tax withholding)