Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

IMI plc

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Type
  
Public company

Industry
  
Engineering

Operating income
  
£236.9 million (2015)

CEO
  
Mark Selway

Traded as
  
LSE: IMI OTCQX: IMIAY

Founded
  
1862

Revenue
  
1.557 billion GBP (2015)

IMI plc wwwimiplccommediaImagesIIMIlogonewlogo

Key people
  
Lord Smith (Chairman) Mark Selway (CEO)

Stock price
  
IMI (LON) 1,277.00 GBX -1.00 (-0.08%)17 Mar, 4:41 PM GMT - Disclaimer

Headquarters
  
Birmingham, United Kingdom

Subsidiaries
  
Norgren, Z&J Technologies GmbH

IMI plc (LSE: IMI), formerly Imperial Metal Industries, is a British-based engineering company headquartered in Birmingham, England. It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index.

Contents

History

The Company was founded by Scottish entrepreneur George Kynoch who opened a percussion cap factory in Witton, West Midlands in 1862, trading as Kynoch. The business soon diversified, manufacturing goods ranging from soap and bicycle components to non-ferrous metals, but by the early 20th century it had developed particular expertise in metallurgy. After World War I it merged with Nobel Industries. In 1926 the Company acquired Eley Brothers, an ammunition business. The Company, by then known as Nobel Explosives, was one of the four businesses which merged in 1927 to create Imperial Chemical Industries. The Witton site became the head office of ICI Metals. In the 1950s the company's researchers perfected the process for producing titanium on a commercial basis. In 1958 ICI Metals bought 50% of Yorkshire Imperial Metals: it acquired the other 50% four years later.

The name Imperial Metal Industries Limited (IMI for short) was adopted on the 100th anniversary of the firm in 1962. The Company was listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1966. Initially ICI retained a majority holding, but in 1978 IMI became fully independent.

In the 1990s the Company disposed of its more basic businesses such as metal smelting and metal founding.

The company announced in October 2013 that a decade-long programme of transformation had been completed with the disposal of two non-core subsidiaries to Berkshire Hathaway for £690m. The disposal of the Cornelius Group, a beverage-dispensing machine business, together with the disposal of a marketing intelligence business, would enable the company to focus on its control valve making business.

Business platforms

The company now has three business divisions:

  • Critical engineering: Critical engineering division
  • Precision engineering: Precision engineering division
  • Hydronic engineering: Hydronic engineering division
  • References

    IMI plc Wikipedia