Corning Inc.

Not to be confused with Owens Corning.
Corning Incorporated
Public
Traded as NYSE: GLW
S&P 500 Component
Industry Glass & Ceramic Materials
Founded 1851 (1851)
Headquarters Corning, New York, U.S.
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Wendell P. Weeks
(Chairman, CEO, and President)
Products Specialty glass
Ceramics
Optical fiber
Cable, hardware & equipment
Emissions control technology
LCD glass
Life sciences products
Revenue Increase US$10.217 billion (2014)[1]
Increase US$1.371 billion (2013)[1]
Increase US$2.472 billion (2014)[1]
Total assets Increase US$ 28.478 billion (2013)[1]
Total equity Increase US$21.211 billion (2013)[1]
Number of employees
Increase 34,000 (October 2014)[1]
Divisions Display technologies, telecommunications,
environmental technologies,
specialty materials,
life sciences
Website www.Corning.com

Corning Incorporated is an American manufacturer of glass, ceramics, and related materials, primarily for industrial and scientific applications. The company was known as Corning Glass Works until 1989, when it changed its name to Corning Incorporated.[2] In 1998, Corning divested itself of its consumer lines of CorningWare and Corelle tableware and Pyrex cookware selling them to World Kitchen, but still holds an interest of about 8%. As of 2014, Corning had five major business sectors: Display Technologies, Environmental Technologies, Life Sciences, Optical Communications, and Specialty Materials. Corning is involved in two joint ventures: Dow Corning and Pittsburgh Corning. Quest Diagnostics and Covance were spun off from Corning in 1996.[3]

History

One of the first optic headlamp lenses, the Corning Conaphore. Selective yellow "Noviol" glass version shown.

Corning Glass Works was founded in 1851 by Amory Houghton, in Somerville, Massachusetts, originally as the Bay State Glass Co. It later moved to Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York, and operated as the Brooklyn Flint Glass Works. The company moved again to its ultimate home and namesake, the city of Corning, New York, in 1868 under leadership of the founder's son, Amory Houghton, Jr.

Over 147 years later, Corning continues to maintain its world headquarters at Corning, N.Y. The firm also established one of the first industrial research labs there in 1908. It continues to expand the nearby research and development facility, as well as operations associated with catalytic converters and diesel engine filter product lines. Corning has a long history of community development and has assured community leaders that it intends to remain headquartered in its small upstate New York hometown.[4]

The California Institute of Technology's 200-inch (5.1 m) telescope mirror at Palomar Observatory was cast by Corning during 1934–1936 out of low expansion borosilicate glass.[5] In 1932, George Ellery Hale approached Corning with the challenge of fabricating the required optic for his Palomar project. A previous effort to fabricate the optic from fused quartz had failed. Corning's first attempt was a failure, the cast blank having voids. Using lessons learned, Corning was successful in the casting of the second blank. After a year of cooling, during which it was almost lost to a flood, in 1935 the blank was completed. The first blank now resides in Corning's Museum of Glass.

In 1935, Corning formed a partnership with Owens-Illinois, which formed the company known today as Owens Corning. Owens Corning was spun off as a separate company in 1938.

1917 advertisement for the Corning Conaphore headlamp lens shown above.

The company had a history of science-based innovations following World War II and the strategy by management was research and "disruptive" and "on demand" product innovation.[6]

In 1962 Corning developed a new toughened automobile windshield designed to be thinner and lighter than existing windshields, which reduced danger of personal injury by shattering into small granules when smashed.[7] This toughened glass had a chemically hardened outer layer, and its manufacture incorporated an ion exchange and a "fusion process" in special furnaces that Corning built in its Blacksburg, Virginia facility.[6][8] Corning developed it as an alternative to laminated windshields with the intention of becoming an automotive industry supplier.[6] The new windshields debuted on the 1970 model year Javelins and AMXs built by American Motors Corporation (AMC).[8] As there were no mandatory safety standards for motor vehicle windshields, the larger automakers had no financial incentive to change from the cheaper existing products.[6][8] Corning terminated its windshield project in 1971, after it turned out to be one of the company's "biggest and most expensive failures."[8] However, like many Corning innovations, the unique process to manufacture this automotive glass was resurrected and is today the basis of their very profitable LCD glass business.

In the fall of 1970, the company announced that researchers Robert D. Maurer, Donald Keck, Peter C. Schultz, and Frank Zimar had demonstrated an optical fiber with a low optical attenuation of 17 dB per kilometer by doping silica glass with titanium. A few years later they produced a fiber with only 4 dB/km, using germanium oxide as the core dopant. Such low attenuations made fiber optics practical for telecommunications and networking. Corning became the world's leading manufacturer of optical fiber.

In 1977, considerable attention was given to Corning's Z Glass project. Z Glass was a product used in television picture tubes. Due to a number of factors, the exact nature of which are subject to dispute, this project was considered a steep loss in profit and productivity. The following year the project made a partial recovery. This incident has been cited as a case study by the Harvard School of Business.[9]

Company profits soared in the late 1990s during the dot-com boom, and Corning expanded its fiber operations significantly with several new plants. The company also entered the photonics market, investing heavily with the intent of becoming the leading provider of complete fiber-optic systems. Failure to succeed in photonics and the collapse in 2000 of the dot-com market had a major impact on the company, and Corning stock plummeted to $1 per share. However, as of 2007 the company had posted five straight years of improving financial performance.

Current technologies

In 2011 Corning announced the expansion of existing facilities and the construction of a Gen 10 facility co-located with the Sharp Corporation manufacturing complex in Sakai, Osaka, Japan.[10] The LCD glass substrate is produced without heavy metals. Corning is a leading manufacturer of the glass used in liquid crystal displays.

The company continues to produce optical fiber and cable for the communications industry at its Wilmington and Concord plants in North Carolina. It is also a major manufacturer of ceramic emission control devices for catalytic converters in cars and light trucks that use gasoline engines. The company is also investing in the production of ceramic emission control products for diesel engines as a result of tighter emission standards for those engines both in the U.S. and abroad.

In 2007 Corning introduced an optic fiber, ClearCurve, which uses nanostructure technology to facilitate the small radius bending found in FTTX installations.

Gorilla Glass, which is a high-strength alkali-aluminosilicate thin sheet glass used as a protective cover glass offering scratch resistance and durability in many handheld devices with touchscreens, went on sale in 2008.[11] According to the book "Steve Jobs" by Walter Isaacson, Gorilla Glass was used in the first iPhone released in 2007.[12]

On October 25, 2011 Corning unveiled Lotus Glass, an environmentally friendly and high-performance glass developed for OLED and LCD displays.[13][14]

Corning invests about 10% of revenue in research and development, and has allocated US$300 million towards further expansion of its Sullivan Park research facility near headquarters in Corning, New York.[15]

Corning Incorporated also manufactures a high-purity fused silica employed in microlithography systems, a low expansion glass utilized in the construction of reflective mirror blanks, windows for U.S. space shuttles, and Steuben art glass. The number of Corning facilities still employing the traditional tanks of molten glass has declined over the years, but it maintains the capacity to supply bulk or finished glass of many types.

Corning is engaged in research and development on green lasers, mercury abatement, microreactors, photovoltaics, and silicon on glass.

Other activities

Corning employs roughly 34,000 people worldwide and had sales of $10.217 billion in 2014.[1] The company has been listed for many years among Fortune magazine's 500 largest companies, and was ranked #343 in 2014.

Although the company has long been publicly owned, James R. Houghton, great-great-grandson of the founder, served as chairman of the board of directors from 2001 to 2007. Over the years Houghton family ownership has declined to about 2%. Wendell P. Weeks has been with the company since 1983 and as of March 2013 was chairman, chief executive officer, and president.[16]

Over its 160-year history Corning invented a process for rapid and inexpensive production of light bulbs, including developing the glass for Thomas Edison's light bulb. It was an early major manufacturer of glass panels and funnels for television tubes, invented and produced Vycor (high temperature glass with high thermal shock resistance). Corning invented and produced Pyrex, CorningWare Pyroceram glass-ceramic cookware, and Corelle durable glass dinnerware. Corning manufactured the windows for US manned space vehicles, and supplied the glass blank for the primary mirror in the Hubble Space Telescope. Corning won the National Medal of Technology four times for its product and process innovations.

In July 2008 Corning announced the sale of Steuben Glass Works to Steuben Glass LLC, an affiliate of the private equity firm Schottenstein Stores Corporation. Steuben Glass had been unprofitable for more than a decade, losing 30 million dollars over the previous five years.[17]

Board of directors

As of 2011:

Criticism

On April 25, 2006, the company restated its historical financial statements to reflect the appropriate accounting and the primary impact of this restatement was to increase the asbestos settlement liability by $94 million pretax.[18] In December 2011, the non-partisan organization Public Campaign criticized Corning for spending $2.81 million on lobbying and not paying any taxes during 2008–2010, instead getting $4 million in tax rebates, despite making a profit of $1.98 billion and having a total compensation for the top 5 executives between $35 and $45 million per year.[19] In July 2012 Susan Ford, Corning's Vice President of Tax, was criticized for telling the United States House Committee on Ways and Means that America's high corporate tax rate put American manufacturers at a distinct disadvantage to competitors headquartered in other countries, despite the fact that in 2011 Corning paid taxes at an actual rate of −0.2%.[20]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Corning, Form 10-K, Annual Report, Filing Date Feb 13, 2013" (PDF). secdatabase.com. Retrieved Mar 28, 2013.
  2. "Corning, Form S-3/A, Filing Date Jan 18, 1994". secdatabase.com. Retrieved Mar 28, 2013.
  3. "Corning, Form 8-K, Current Report, Filing Date Jan 13, 1997". secdatabase.com. Retrieved Mar 28, 2013.
  4. "Corning Chairman Emphasizes Sustainable Performance and "Unwavering" Commitment to Innovation". Corning.com. 2008-04-24. Retrieved 2010-08-05.
  5. "Caltech Astronomy: History - 1908–1949". Caltech. n.d. Retrieved 2008-03-17.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Clarke, Sally H.; Lamoreaux, Naomi; Usselman, Steven (2009). The Challenge of Remaining Innovative: Insights from Twentieth-Century American Business. Stanford University Press. p. 99. ISBN 9780804758925. Retrieved 2011-09-07.
  7. Flint, Jerry M. (1968-11-27). "New Windshield for Cars Called Safer in Crashes". The New York Times. p. 53. Retrieved 2011-09-07.
  8. 1 2 3 4 Dyer, Davis; Gross, Daniel (2001). The generations of Corning: the life and times of a global corporation. Oxford University Press. pp. 302–303. ISBN 9780195140958. Retrieved 2011-09-07.
  9. http://cb.hbsp.harvard.edu/cb/pl/13382473/13382475/309393a76c9c7ace561fb1692e6bace7
  10. "Large Generation Glass". Corning Incorporated. Retrieved 2011-09-07.
  11. "Gorilla Glass Overview". Corning.com. 31 December 2007. Retrieved 26 November 2010.
  12. Isaacson, Walter (2011). Steve Jobs. Kindle Locations 8137-8141: Simon & Schuster, Inc..
  13. "Corning, Form 10-K, Annual Report, Filing Date Feb 13, 2012" (PDF). secdatabase.com. Retrieved Mar 28, 2013.
  14. "Corning Unveils Corning Lotus™ Glass for High-Performance Displays". Corning.com. 25 October 2011. Retrieved 27 October 2011.
  15. "Corning, Form DEF 14A, Filing Date Mar 11, 2013". secdatabase.com. Retrieved Mar 28, 2013.
  16. "Corning Reaches Agreement to Sell Steuben". Corning Incorporated. 2008-07-23. Retrieved 201-09-07. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  17. "Corning Announces First-Quarter Results; Results Exceed Guidance; Corning to Restate 2003 Pittsburgh Corning Corporation Litigation Settlement".
  18. Portero, Ashley. "30 Major U.S. Corporations Paid More to Lobby Congress Than Income Taxes, 2008-2010". International Business Times. Archived from the original on 26 December 2011. Retrieved 26 December 2011.
  19. Waldron, Travis. "reporter/blogger". thinkprogress.org. Retrieved 26 July 2012.

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