Compare · BTU vs HCC
BTU vs HCC
Side-by-side comparison of Peabody Energy Corporation (BTU) and Warrior Met Coal Inc. (HCC): market cap, price performance, sector, and recent activity on the wire.
Summary
- Both BTU and HCC operate in Coal Mining (Energy), so they compete in similar markets.
- HCC is the larger of the two at $5.28B, about 1.5x BTU ($3.42B).
- Over the past year, BTU is up 108.8% and HCC is up 106.3% - BTU leads by 2.5 points.
- BTU has been more active in the news (8 items in the past 4 weeks vs 1 for HCC).
- Both have 8 recent analyst ratings on file.
Peabody Energy Corporation
Peabody Energy Corporation engages in coal mining business in the United States, Japan, Taiwan, Australia, China, India, Vietnam, South Korea, and internationally. The company operates through Seaborne Thermal Mining, Seaborne Metallurgical Mining, Powder River Basin Mining, and Other U.S. Thermal Mining segments. It is involved in mining, preparation, and sale of thermal coal primarily to electric utilities; mining bituminous and sub-bituminous coal deposits; and mining metallurgical coal, such as hard coking coal, semi-hard coking coal, semi-soft coking coal, and pulverized coal injection coal. The company supplies coal primarily to electricity generators, industrial facilities, and steel manufacturers. As of December 31, 2020, it owned interests in 17 coal mining operations located in the United States and Australia; and had approximately 3.0 billion tons of proven and probable coal reserves and approximately 450,000 acres of surface property through ownership and lease agreements. The company also engages in direct and brokered trading of coal and freight-related contracts, as well as provides transportation-related services, which involve financial derivative contracts and physical contracts. Peabody Energy Corporation was founded in 1883 and is headquartered in St. Louis, Missouri.
Warrior Met Coal Inc.
Warrior Met Coal, Inc. produces and exports non-thermal metallurgical coal for the steel industry. It operates two underground mines located in Alabama. The company sells its metallurgical coal to a customer base of blast furnace steel producers located primarily in Europe, South America, and Asia. It also sells natural gas, which is extracted as a byproduct from coal production. Warrior Met Coal, Inc. was founded in 2015 and is headquartered in Brookwood, Alabama.
Latest BTU
- CAO and Corporate Secretary Jarboe Scott T. sold $81,958 worth of shares (2,925 units at $28.02) as part of a pre-agreed trading plan, decreasing direct ownership by 3% to 85,295 units (SEC Form 4)
- Peabody Energy Corporation filed SEC Form 8-K: Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement, Creation of a Direct Financial Obligation, Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities
- SEC Form 8-K filed by Peabody Energy Corporation
- Peabody Prices $225 Million Convertible Senior Notes Offering
- SEC Form 8-K filed by Peabody Energy Corporation
- Peabody Announces Proposed Convertible Senior Notes Offering
- Peabody Energy Corporation filed SEC Form 8-K: Leadership Update, Financial Statements and Exhibits
- Peabody Energy Corporation filed SEC Form 8-K: Regulation FD Disclosure, Financial Statements and Exhibits
- Amendment: SEC Form SCHEDULE 13G/A filed by Peabody Energy Corporation
- Director Walker Clayton D. was granted 5,616 shares, increasing direct ownership by 248% to 7,884 units (SEC Form 4)
Latest HCC
- Officer Gant Kelli K. sold $2,200,000 worth of shares (20,000 units at $110.00) as part of a pre-agreed trading plan, decreasing direct ownership by 23% to 67,775 units (SEC Form 4)
- Amendment: SEC Form SCHEDULE 13G/A filed by Warrior Met Coal Inc.
- SEC Form 10-Q filed by Warrior Met Coal Inc.
- Warrior Met Coal Inc. filed SEC Form 8-K: Results of Operations and Financial Condition, Financial Statements and Exhibits
- Warrior Reports First Quarter 2026 Results
- Director Chainey Kimberly converted options into 2,534 shares (SEC Form 4)
- Director Schnorr Lisa M. converted options into 2,534 shares, increasing direct ownership by 27% to 11,857 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Harvey J Brett converted options into 3,041 shares, increasing direct ownership by 8% to 43,001 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Williams Stephen D. converted options into 2,534 shares, increasing direct ownership by 8% to 35,103 units (SEC Form 4)
- Director Schumacher Alan H converted options into 2,534 shares, increasing direct ownership by 6% to 42,054 units (SEC Form 4)