Cleanaway Company Limited (TPE:8422)

Taiwan flag Taiwan · Delayed Price · Currency is TWD
178.50
-0.50 (-0.28%)
Jun 20, 2025, 2:36 PM CST
-6.54%
Market Cap 19.97B
Revenue (ttm) 5.35B
Net Income (ttm) 1.37B
Shares Out 111.88M
EPS (ttm) 11.13
PE Ratio 16.04
Forward PE 16.71
Dividend 9.94 (5.57%)
Ex-Dividend Date Jun 10, 2025
Volume 395,381
Average Volume 488,564
Open 180.00
Previous Close 179.00
Day's Range 178.00 - 180.00
52-Week Range 172.50 - 197.50
Beta 0.02
RSI 27.61
Earnings Date Jul 15, 2025

About Cleanaway Company

Cleanaway Company Limited operates as an intermediate treatment solidification company in the waste disposal process in Taiwan, Mainland China, Vietnam, Malaysia, and internationally. It operates through six segments: Solidification and Excavation, Landfill, Removal, Mainland Business, Investment, and Papermaking. The company offers intermediate treatment for hazardous industrial waste and pollution; undertakes disposal site remediation projects; contaminated and illegal dump sites cleanup; landfill for hazardous industrial waste intermediate t... [Read more]

Sector Industrials
Founded 1999
Employees 181
Stock Exchange Taiwan Stock Exchange
Ticker Symbol 8422
Full Company Profile

Financial Performance

In 2024, Cleanaway Company's revenue was 5.17 billion, an increase of 21.19% compared to the previous year's 4.27 billion. Earnings were 1.17 billion, an increase of 17.92%.

Financial Statements

News

Cleanaway’s ‘M&A burger with the lot’ reveals ugly fracture in markets

The rubbish collector’s $377 million acquisition of Contract Resources got a bit of a hostile reception. Why? Buying from private equity.

3 months ago - The Australian Financial Review

ASX 200 LIVE: ASX to slip

Australian shares are set to open down. Earnings expected from Santos, IAG, Brambles, Cleanaway. Gold resets record high. Bitcoin above $US59,000. Follow updates here.

10 months ago - The Australian Financial Review

Hydrogen collapse entangles big Australian companies

Fortescue, Cleanaway and Wesfarmers are among the creditors and debtors named in the latest corporate collapse to shake the struggling hydrogen sector.

10 months ago - The Australian Financial Review