Compare · DD vs KWR
DD vs KWR
Side-by-side comparison of DuPont de Nemours Inc. (DD) and Quaker Houghton (KWR): market cap, price performance, sector, and recent activity on the wire.
Summary
- Both DD and KWR operate in Major Chemicals (Industrials), so they compete in similar markets.
- DD is the larger of the two at $19.26B, about 7.7x KWR ($2.49B).
- Over the past year, DD is down 31.5% and KWR is up 19.8% - KWR leads by 51.3 points.
- DD has been more active in the news (18 items in the past 4 weeks vs 17 for KWR).
- DD has more recent analyst coverage (25 ratings vs 8 for KWR).
- Company
- DuPont de Nemours Inc.
- Quaker Houghton
- Price
- $46.97+0.28%
- $144.00+2.39%
- Market cap
- $19.26B
- $2.49B
- 1M return
- -2.89%
- +0.54%
- 1Y return
- -31.46%
- +19.83%
- Industry
- Major Chemicals
- Major Chemicals
- Exchange
- NYSE
- NYSE
- IPO
- 2017
- News (4w)
- 18
- 17
- Recent ratings
- 25
- 8
DuPont de Nemours Inc.
DuPont de Nemours, Inc. provides technology-based materials, ingredients, and solutions in the United States, Canada, the Asia Pacific, Latin America, Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. The company's Electronics & Imaging segment supplies materials to manufacture photovoltaics and solar cells; materials and printing systems to the advanced printing industry; and materials and solutions for the fabrication of semiconductors and integrated circuits addressing front-end and back-end of the manufacturing process. This segment also provides semiconductor and advanced packaging materials; dielectric and metallization solutions for chip packaging; and silicones for light emitting diode packaging and semiconductor applications; permanent and process chemistries for the fabrication of printed circuit boards to include laminates and substrates, electroless, and electrolytic metallization solutions, as well as patterning solutions, and materials and metallization processes for metal finishing, decorative, and industrial applications. In addition, it offers various materials to manufacture rigid and flexible displays for liquid crystal displays, advanced-matrix organic light emitting diode, and quantum dot applications. The Transportation & Advanced Polymers segment provides engineering resins, adhesives, silicones, lubricants, and parts to engineers and designers in the transportation, electronics, healthcare, industrial, and consumer end-markets. Its Safety & Construction segment provides engineered products and integrated systems for worker safety, water purification and separation, aerospace, energy, medical packaging, and building materials. The company was formerly known as DowDuPont Inc. and changed its name to DuPont de Nemours, Inc. in June 2019. DuPont de Nemours, Inc. is based in Wilmington, Delaware.
Quaker Houghton
Quaker Chemical Corporation develops, produces, and markets various formulated chemical specialty products for a range of heavy industrial and manufacturing applications. It operates through four segments: Americas; Europe, Middle East, and Africa; Asia/Pacific; and Global Specialty Businesses. The company offers metal removal fluids, cleaning fluids, corrosion inhibitors, metal drawing and forming fluids, die cast mold releases, heat treatment and quenchants, metal forging fluids, hydraulic fluids, specialty greases, metal finishing fluids, offshore sub-sea energy control fluids, rolling lubricants, rod and wire drawing fluids, and surface treatment chemicals. It also provides chemical management services. The company serves steel, aluminum, automotive, aerospace, offshore, can, mining, and metalworking companies. The company was formerly known as Quaker Chemical Products Corporation and changed its name to Quaker Chemical Corporation in August 1962. Quaker Chemical Corporation was founded in 1918 and is headquartered in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania.
Latest DD
- CEO Koch Lori covered exercise/tax liability with 4,673 shares and sold $12,741 worth of shares (261 units at $48.82), decreasing direct ownership by 1% to 345,172 units (SEC Form 4)
- SVP & CFO Franzen Antonella B covered exercise/tax liability with 1,558 shares, decreasing direct ownership by 2% to 68,809 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Macpherson Donald G was granted 671 shares, increasing direct ownership by 13% to 5,868 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Lowery Frederick M. was granted 800 shares, increasing direct ownership by 2% to 40,205 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Cutler Alexander M was granted 1,033 shares, increasing direct ownership by 1% to 81,794 units (SEC Form 4)
- SEC Form SD filed by DuPont de Nemours Inc.
- Director Breen Edward D was granted 4,030 shares, increasing direct ownership by 1% to 278,008 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Macpherson Donald G was granted 4,030 shares, increasing direct ownership by 345% to 5,197 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Mcmaken Kurt B was granted 4,030 shares, increasing direct ownership by 95% to 8,258 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Lowery Frederick M. was granted 4,030 shares, increasing direct ownership by 11% to 39,405 units (SEC Form 4)
Latest KWR
- Truist initiated coverage on Quaker Chemical with a new price target
- Director Foufopoulos - De Ridder Lucrece covered exercise/tax liability with 124 shares and was granted 413 shares, increasing direct ownership by 13% to 2,570 units (SEC Form 4) (tax withholding)
- Director Foufopoulos - De Ridder Lucrece converted options into 1,216 shares and covered exercise/tax liability with 365 shares, increasing direct ownership by 60% to 2,281 units (SEC Form 4) to satisfy tax liability
- Director Douglas Mark converted options into 1,216 shares and was granted 766 shares, increasing direct ownership by 46% to 6,278 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director West Fay converted options into 1,216 shares, increasing direct ownership by 30% to 5,279 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Shaller Russell converted options into 1,216 shares and was granted 413 shares, increasing direct ownership by 67% to 4,045 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Osborne William H converted options into 1,216 shares (SEC Form 4)
- Director Hinduja Sanjay converted options into 1,216 shares, increasing direct ownership by 31% to 5,193 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Henry Charlotte C. converted options into 1,216 shares, increasing direct ownership by 37% to 4,487 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Frisby Jeffry D converted options into 1,216 shares, increasing direct ownership by 20% to 7,298 units (SEC Form 4)