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Hyundai Hysco

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hyundai Hysco
Native name
현대하이스코 주식회사
Company typePublic
IndustrySteel
Founded1975; 49 years ago (1975)
DefunctJuly 1, 2015; 9 years ago (2015-07-01)
FateMerger with Hyundai Steel
HeadquartersUlsan, South Korea
ProductsSteel Pipes, Auto Lightweight Products
RevenueIncrease 4,046 billion KRW (2013)
Increase 161 billion KRW (2013)
Increase 1,608 billion KRW (2013)
Total assetsIncrease 2,258 billion KRW (2013)
Total equityIncrease 703 billion KRW (2013)
Number of employees
360(2013)
ParentHyundai Motor Group

Hyundai Hysco Co., Ltd. (Korean현대하이스코 주식회사) was a steel company of Hyundai Motor Group, headquartered in Ulsan, South Korea. Hysco produced automotive steel sheet products and various steel pipes. The company was merged with Hyundai Steel in July 2015.[1]

History

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Hyundai Hysco was established under the name Kyung-il Industrial Co., Ltd. in 1975. The company was renamed to Hyundai Pipe Co., Ltd. in 1980 soon after the completion of its full-scale steel pipe plant in 1979. As a scheme to be a leading steel company in the global market, the company was renamed once again to Hyundai Hysco in February 2001.[2]

In November 1982, two years after the steel pipe plant was built, Hyundai Hysco was awarded the 'US$100 Million Export Tower' in November 1982. In 1997, the company set a new record in the steel industry by producing over 10 million tons of steel pipes.[2]

For over 20 years, Hyundai Hysco has been the leading company in the Korean steel pipe industry.[citation needed] After taking the largest market share in the steel pipe industry, they entered the market for cold rolled products, which require the highest level of technology among other sectors of the steel industries. Hyundai Hysco has begun the commercial production of cold rolled products in April 1999. Since then, Hyundai Hysco set numerous records in the area of cold rolling, rewriting the history of Korean steel industries. Hyundai Hysco's achievements include the building of a full capacity system in less than one year from the commencement of commercial production and producing 5 million tons of automotive steel products in five years. In 2004, Hyundai Hysco took over an old and standstill works, Hanbo Steel, in Dangjin, in a consortium with Hyundai Steel.

Hyundai Hysco now operates Global Steel Service Center, Automotive Parts Business, Steel Pipe Products, and Resource Development as four core business after partial merger with Hyundai Steel in 2013.[3]

Operations

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Hysco's corporate office was located in Seoul, and it also operated works in Ulsan, South Korea with operations worldwide. Hyundai The company operated a steel pipe facility in Korea, eleven overseas processing centers, and three overseas offices internationally.[2]

Ulsan Works

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Ulsan works, located at Ulsan-Si Buk-Gu Yumpo-dong.[4]

Overseas Works

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Hysco has eleven overseas steel service centers in total. There are four steel service centers in China, one in India, four in Europe, two in the US. Hysco also has three sales offices in Houston, LA in US and Tokyo in Japan. Lastly, Hysco operates ASPI office in India to produce automotive pipe with Sumitomo.[citation needed]

Brief history

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1970

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  • 1975.03 Established Kyung-il Co., Ltd.
  • 1979.05 Completed construction on the steel pipe mill

1980

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  • 1980.05 Changed name to Hyundai Pipe Co., LTD.
  • 1981.10 Obtained mill approval by Lloyd's Register of Shipping

1990

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  • 1997.04 Started construction on the cold rolling mill
  • 1999.03 Completed construction on the cold rolling mill

2000

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  • 2000.11 Received Three Hundred Million-Dollar Export Award
  • 2001.01 Changed company name to Hyundai Hysco
  • 2003.11 Completion of Beijing Factory
  • 2004.10 Opening of Dangjin Factory
  • 2005.01 Exceed 10 million tons cold rolled steel sheet production
  • 2005.05 Started commercial production of Hydroforming product
  • 2006.01 Completed establishment of PCI system
  • 2006.08 Completion of Dangjin Factory
  • 2007.01 Completion of Jiangsu Factory (China)
  • 2007.08 Completion of India Factory
  • 2008.01 Transferred to Seoul Jamwon Office Building

2010

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  • 2013.12 Partial merger with Hyundai Steel for Cold-Rolled Sheet reorganization

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "FTC issues warning to Hyundai Motor for belatedly cutting cross-shareholding ties". Yonhap. Sejong. May 19, 2016.
  2. ^ a b c "현대하이스코" [Hyundai Hysco]. terms.naver.com (in Korean). Retrieved 2019-05-24.
  3. ^ Bae, Hyun-jung (October 17, 2013). "Hyundai Steel, Hysco partially merge steel biz". The Korea Herald.
  4. ^ "MSN". www.msn.com. Retrieved 2024-03-19.
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