National Coffee and Sugar Corporation: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 01:47, 3 March 2020
Private | |
Traded as | CNCA |
Industry | Coffee and Sugar Industry |
Founded | 1899 |
Founders | Santiago Gálvez Cambeiro |
Headquarters | Torre Emperador Adolfo III, Salvador, Salvador, Creeperopolis San Romero, San Romero, Creeperopolis |
Area served | Creeperopolis, Quebecshire |
Key people | Sebastián Fernán Cicerón (CEO) Mateo Gálvez Semprún (Chairman) |
Products | Coffee Coffee Beans Sugar Sugarcane Others |
Revenue | CCL$223.2 billion (2019) |
CCL$1.7 billion (2019) | |
Number of employees | 79,616 |
Subsidiaries | Creeperian Coffee Company Creeperian Sugar Company |
Website | www.cornaca.org.hte |
The National Coffee and Sugar Corporation (Creeperian Spanish: Corporación Nacional de Café y Azúcar, abbreviated CORNACA) is a Creeperian monopoly in the Creeperian coffee and sugar industry headquartered in Salvador, Salvador, Creeperopolis. The monopoly consists of the Creeperian Coffee Company (CCC) and the Creeperian Sugar Company (CAC) which were merged after the CCC purchased the CAC in 1899.
CORNACA is the biggest coffee and sugar company in the world and one of Creeperopolis' private-sector companies.
The company was ranked #4 as the most valuable Creeperian company after Pepsi, the National Soccer Association, and BURETCREMAP.
Current Operations
Business Areas
CORNACA operates in the following business areas:
- Coffee farming
- Sugarcane farming
- Coffee picking
- Coffee transportation
- Sugar transportation
Finances
Year | Revenue in mil. CCL-$ |
Operating Income in mil. CCL-$ |
Price per Share in CCL-$ |
---|---|---|---|
2018 | 205.6 | 1.66 | 103.84 |
2019 | 223.2 | 1.7 | 104.16 |
Production
CORNACA controls every Creeperian sugar or coffee plantation in the country, accounting for 100% of the country's sugar and coffee production and a significant portion of the world's production.
International Investments
Quebecshire has made investments into CORNACA.
CORNACA sells its produced sugar to Pepsi.
Ownership
The company is owned by the Gálvez Family, which has owned the company since its foundation in 1899.
Corporate Social Responsibility
CORNACA is a major supporter of the arts in Creeperopolis.
History
Founding
The National Coffee and Sugar Corporation was founded in 1899 after Santiago Gálvez Cambeiro, owner of the Creeperian Coffee Company (CCC), bought out the Creeperian Sugar Company (CAC) creating a coffee and sugar monopoly.
From 1899-1933, the company received government subsidies.
Civil War
During the Creeperian Civil War from 1933-1949, the company almost went bankrupt as its plantations were continuously bombed or invaded.
The CEO of CORNACA, Francisco Sánchez Vizcarra, was executed by the Militarist Nationalist Front during the Denshire Massacre on June 13, 1944.
Post-Civil War to Present
After the civil war, government subsidies continued to help the company recover from near bankruptcy.
After the Tuxtla Martínez Train Disaster, the CEO of CORNACA was put on trial for several charges. All charges were dropped and accusations of bribery were spread. See Corruption in Creeperopolis.
Today CORNACA is the fourth most valuable company in Creeperopolis.
List of CORNACA CEOs
No. | Photo | Name (Birth-Death) |
Term | Owner (Term) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Term Start | Term End | Term Length | ||||
1. | Santiago Gálvez Cambeiro (1838-1903) |
February 22, 1899 | March 12, 1899 | 19 days | Santiago Gálvez Cambeiro (1899-1903)
| |
2. | Gustavo López Davidson (1861-1927) |
March 12, 1899 | March 15, 1927 | 28 years and 4 days | ||
Santiago Gálvez Ortega (1903-1922) | ||||||
Emmanuel Gálvez Ortega (1922-1956) | ||||||
3. | File:Francisco "Chico" Sánchez.jpg | Francisco Sánchez Vizcarra (1884-1944) |
March 15, 1927 | June 13, 1944 | 17 years and 91 days | |
4. | Cristian Abasto Valerio (1902-1979) |
June 13, 1944 | September 18, 1979 | 35 years and 98 days | ||
Eduardo Gálvez Salinas (1956-1979) | ||||||
5. | Christopher Graciani Cortéz (1936-2002) |
September 18, 1979 | May 7, 2002 | 22 years and 232 days | José Gálvez Campos (1979-2004) | |
6. | Christopher Graciani Cortéz (1959-2015) |
May 7, 2002 | January 1, 2015 | 12 years and 240 days | ||
Mateo Gálvez Semprún (2004-) | ||||||
7. | File:Carlos Calleja.jpg | Sebastián Fernán Cicerón (1976-) |
January 1, 2015 | Incumbent | 9 years and 329 days |