UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                    FORM 8-K

                                 CURRENT REPORT
                       Pursuant to Section 13 OR 15(d) of
                       The Securities Exchange Act of 1934

        Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported) October 4, 2004


                           TITANIUM METALS CORPORATION
 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)


Delaware                            0-28538                   13-5630895
 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(State or other jurisdiction       (Commission               (IRS Employer
of incorporation)                   File Number)             Identification No.)


1999 Broadway, Ste. 4300, Denver, Colorado                      80202
 (Address of principal executive offices)                    (Zip Code)

        Registrant's telephone number, including area code (303) 296-5600
                                                          ----------------------


 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         (Former name or former address, if changed since last report.)

Check  the  appropriate  box  below  if the  Form  8-K  filing  is  intended  to
simultaneously  satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the
following provisions (see General Instruction A.2. below):

[ ] Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR
230.425)

[ ] Soliciting  material  pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR
240.14a-12)

[ ] Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange
Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))

[ ] Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange
Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))





  Item 7.01       Regulation FD Disclosure.

     The registrant  hereby  furnishes the  information  set forth in the speech
with an accompanying  visual  presentation  delivered by Registrant's  Chairman,
President and Chief Executive Officer to the 2004 Annual International  Titanium
Association  ("ITA")  meeting,  copies of which are attached  hereto as Exhibits
99.1 and 99.2 and incorporated herein by reference.

     The information,  including the exhibit,  the registrant  furnishes in this
report is not deemed  "filed"  for  purposes  of  section  18 of the  Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended,  or otherwise  subject to the  liabilities  of
that  section.  Registration  statements  or  other  documents  filed  with  the
Securities and Exchange  Commission  shall not incorporate  this  information by
reference, except as otherwise expressly stated in such filing.



  Item 9.01  Financial Statements and Exhibits.

         (c) Exhibits.

             Item No.          Exhibit Index

             99.1              Speech of  Registrant's  Chairman,  President and
Chief  Executive  Officer delivered October 4, 2004.

             99.2              Visual presentation of Registrant's Chairman,
President and Chief Executive Officer delivered October 4, 2004.









                                   SIGNATURES

     Pursuant to the  requirements  of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, the
registrant  has duly  caused  this  report  to be  signed  on its  behalf by the
undersigned hereunto duly authorized.



                                      TITANIUM METALS CORPORATION
                                      (Registrant)

                                      /s/ Matthew O'Leary
                                      Matthew O'Leary
                                      Corporate Attorney and Assistant Secretary



Date: October 4, 2004








                                INDEX TO EXHIBITS

Exhibit No.                Description

99.1 Speech of  Registrant's  Chairman,  President and Chief  Executive  Officer
     delivered October 4, 2004.

99.2 Visual presentation of Registrant's Chairman, President and Chief Executive
     Officer delivered October 4, 2004.






                                                                    EXHIBIT 99.1
SLIDE 1


GOOD MORNING.

I AM PLEASED TO BE HERE THIS  MORNING TO ADDRESS  YOU. I DO SO TODAY IN A MARKET
ENVIRONMENT  WHICH HAS  CHANGED  SIGNIFICANTLY  SINCE OUR  MEETING  LAST YEAR IN
MONTEREY.  THE COMMERCIAL AEROSPACE AND INDUSTRIAL MARKETS FOR TITANIUM ARE BOTH
STRONGER THAN MOST OF US  ANTICIPATED  IN MONTEREY.  TODAY I WANT TO EXPLORE WHY
THESE MARKETS IMPROVED SOONER THAN EXPECTED AND WHAT THAT MEANS FOR THE FUTURE.

SLIDE 2


FOR THOSE OF YOU FAMILIAR WITH REGULATED  PUBLIC COMPANIES IN THE UNITED STATES,
YOU KNOW THAT WE QUALIFY ALL OF OUR  PROJECTIONS OR FORWARD  LOOKING  STATEMENTS
WITH A NUMBER OF  FACTORS,  WHICH MAY CAUSE  ACTUAL  RESULTS TO DIFFER  FROM THE
FORWARD LOOKING  STATEMENTS.  RATHER THAN LIST THEM ALL TODAY, I WOULD REFER YOU
TO TIMET'S PUBLIC SEC FILINGS, WHICH GO INTO CONSIDERABLE DETAIL.

FOR THOSE OF YOU NOT FAMILIAR  WITH U.S.  SECURITIES  LAWS AND  REGULATIONS  YOU
MIGHT THINK IT UNNECESSARY TO QUALIFY  PROJECTIONS BECAUSE YOU ALREADY KNOW THEY
ARE RARELY PRECISE. NEVERTHELESS, WE HAVE TO LIVE WITH THE SYSTEM WE HAVE.

SLIDE 3


I PLAN TO FOCUS MY SPEECH ON WHAT HAS HAPPENED  SINCE THE  MONTEREY,  CALIFORNIA
MEETING A YEAR AGO. FIRST I WILL LOOK AT GLOBAL ECONOMIC TRENDS.  SECOND, I WILL
REVIEW TRENDS AFFECTING THE COMMERCIAL  AEROSPACE  MARKET.  AND FINALLY,  TRENDS
IMPACTING INDUSTRIAL AND CONSUMER MARKETS. INCLUDED IN THE LATTER TWO ITEMS WILL
BE OUR PROJECTIONS OF FUTURE TITANIUM CONSUMPTION.

SLIDE 4


AT THE  MEETING  IN  MONTEREY  LAST  OCTOBER WE WERE  LOOKING  BACK AT AN ANEMIC
OVERALL U.S.  ECONOMY.  WE SAW A VIRTUAL  NO-GROWTH  ECONOMY FOR 2001, ONLY 1.9%
GROWTH IN 2002,  AND THE  REPORTED  NUMBERS  FOR THE FIRST  HALF OF 2003  SHOWED
GROWTH AT ONLY 1.1% AS COMPARED TO THE SECOND HALF OF 2002.  THE SECOND  QUARTER
2003 GDP  GROWTH WAS  ENCOURAGING  BUT WAS AN OUTLIER  WHEN  LOOKING  BACK 2 1/2
YEARS.

SLIDE 5



IN EUROPE AND JAPAN WE SAW A SIMILAR TREND,  WITH LIMITED GROWTH.  BOTH EUROPE'S
AND JAPAN'S GROWTH  ACTUALLY SLOWED FROM 1.6% IN 2001 TO 0.8% IN 2002 FOR EUROPE
AND 0.4% IN 2001 AND -0.3% IN 2002 FOR JAPAN.  AND THE FIRST HALF OF 2003 SHOWED
LITTLE  IMPROVEMENT.  ASIAN ECONOMIES WERE STRONGER BUT WERE ALSO SUFFERING FROM
9/11 AND SARS.


SLIDE 6


THIS SLIDE SHOWS WHAT WE HAVE LEARNED ABOUT THE ECONOMY SINCE MONTEREY. AS SHOWN
BY THE BARS ON THE  RIGHT  IN GOLD,  IN THE  FOUR  QUARTERS  FOLLOWING  OUR LAST
MEETING,  U.S. GDP GREW AT A RATE OF 4.4%, A  SIGNIFICANT  IMPROVEMENT  OVER THE
EARLIER 2 1/2 YEAR PERIOD.

SLIDE 7


AS YOU CAN SEE FROM THE BLACK  STRIPED BARS ON THE RIGHT,  THE EUROPEAN  ECONOMY
HAS SHOWN  MODERATE  IMPROVEMENT  SINCE MID 2003,  AND THE JAPANESE  ECONOMY HAS
IMPROVED  MARKEDLY - IF NOT ROBUSTLY IN THAT SAME PERIOD,  AS CAN BE SEEN BY THE
RED STRIPED BARS.

THIS STRONG  OVERALL  IMPROVEMENT IN GLOBAL  ECONOMIES  PROVIDES A BACK DROP FOR
EXAMINING  THE  COMMERCIAL  AEROSPACE  AND  INDUSTRIAL/CONSUMER  SECTORS  OF THE
TITANIUM INDUSTRY.

SLIDE 8


LET'S LOOK AT COMMERCIAL AEROSPACE FIRST.

IN MONTEREY,  THE OUTLOOK FOR THE WORLD'S AIRLINES,  PARTICULARLY THE MAJOR U.S.
AIRLINES,  WAS  SHOWING  FEW  SIGNS OF  IMPROVING.  WORLDWIDE  AIRLINE  TRAFFIC,
MEASURED  IN  REVENUE  PASSENGER  MILES  (RPM'S),   WAS  NOT  VERY  ENCOURAGING.
THROUGHOUT  MOST OF THE WORLD,  RPM'S  REMAINED BELOW THE PRE SEPTEMBER 11, 2001
LEVELS AND U.S.  MAJOR  AIRLINES HAD INCURRED  MASSIVE  LOSSES IN 2002 AND 2003.
THEY  WERE  STARING  AT  NEARLY  $3  BILLION  IN  ANTICIPATED  LOSSES  FOR 2004.
ADDITIONALLY, BOEING AND AIRBUS WERE EXPECTING DELIVERIES IN 2004 TO REMAIN FLAT
COMPARED TO THE 2003 LEVEL. THE AIRBUS 380 WAS IN ITS EARLY  DEVELOPMENTAL PHASE
AND THE 7E7 WAS STILL A CONCEPT.

AIRLINE MONITOR'S JULY 2003 DELIVERY FORECAST (SHOWN HERE IN RED), WHICH WAS THE
MOST  CURRENT  AIRLINE  MONITOR  FORECAST  AT THE TIME OF LAST  YEAR'S  MEETING,
SIGNIFICANTLY  AND NEGATIVELY  RESTATED ITS JANUARY 2003 FORECAST (SHOWN HERE IN
GREEN) BY SHOWING A DECLINING  DELIVERY SCHEDULE THROUGH 2005 VERSUS ITS EARLIER
PREDICTION OF A FLAT MARKET THROUGH THIS PERIOD.

SLIDE 9

NOW LET'S LOOK AT WHAT'S DIFFERENT.  FIRST, U.S. AIRLINE RPM'S FINALLY SURPASSED
THE PRE-SEPTEMBER 2001 LEVEL IN JULY OF THIS YEAR.  WORLDWIDE RPMS


FOR JULY 2004  SUBSTANTIALLY  EXCEEDED  EARLIER PERIODS FOR THE LAST FOUR YEARS,
OVERCOMING 9/11 AND SARS ISSUES.


SECOND,  WHILE THE U.S. MAJOR  AIRLINES ARE NOT EXPECTED TO BE PROFITABLE  UNTIL
2005, AND WE READ EVERY DAY ABOUT THE  BANKRUPTCIES OR NEAR BANKRUPTCY OF UNITED
AIRLINES,  U.S. AIRWAYS AND DELTA AIRLINES,  IF WE LOOK AT THE NUMBERS CAREFULLY
WE SEE THAT AN IMPORTANT TREND HAS EMERGED IN THE LAST 18 MONTHS.  THE "LOW-COST
AIRLINES"  LIKE JET BLUE,  RYAN AIR,  FRONTIER  AND  AIRTRAN  HAVE NOT ONLY BEEN
GROWING  RAPIDLY,  BUT MOST HAVE BEEN  PROFITABLE  DURING THE LAST THREE  YEARS.
THESE AIRLINES IN THE U.S. AND OTHER "LOW-COST AIRLINES" IN EUROPE AND ASIA HAVE
CHOSEN A STRATEGY OF BUYING NEW  AIRCRAFT TO GET  STARTED  AND  EXPANDING  THEIR
ROUTES RAPIDLY,  WHICH FURTHER INCREASES THE NEED FOR NEW AIRCRAFT.  LOW CAPITAL
COSTS AND GREATER OPERATING EFFICIENCIES DRIVE THIS STRATEGY.

SLIDE 10

AS THIS CHART SHOWS,  THE "LOW COST AIRLINES" GROWTH IN TRAFFIC (SHOWN IN GREEN)
SUBSTANTIALLY  EXCEEDS  THAT OF THE MAJORS  (SHOWN IN BLUE).  IF  SOUTHWEST  (AN
ESTABLISHED  "LOW COST AIRLINE") IS TAKEN OUT OF THE GREEN BARS,  TRAFFIC GROWTH
RATES OF LOW COST AIRLINES WOULD BE EVEN GREATER.

THIRD,  LOOKING  AT THE MAJOR  AIRFRAME  MANUFACTURERS,  BOEING  AND  AIRBUS ARE
PROJECTING  HIGHER  AIRCRAFT  DELIVERIES FOR 2004 AND 2005. THE AIRBUS 380 HAS A
STRONG  ORDER  BOOK AND IS IN THE EARLY  STAGES OF  PRODUCTION.  BOEING IS FULLY
COMMITTED TO THE 7E7 AND HAS STRONG INITIAL  ORDERS.  THE BEST INDICATION OF THE
SUCCESS OF THE 7E7 IS THAT  AIRBUS HAS  ANNOUNCED  IT MAY BUILD A VERSION OF THE
A330 TO COMPETE WITH THE 7E7.

SLIDE 11


FINALLY,  PERHAPS THE MOST DRAMATIC CHANGE IN OUTLOOK CAME FROM AIRLINE MONITOR.
THIS GRAPH  SHOWS  THEIR JULY 2003  PREDICTIONS  IN RED (WHICH IS WHAT WE HAD IN
MONTEREY),  THEIR JANUARY 2004 INCREASE IN BLUE AND THEIR LATEST FORECAST,  JULY
2004, IN BLACK.  WHILE PART OF THIS CHANGED  FORECAST IS SIMPLY  KEEPING UP WITH
NEAR TERM  ANNOUNCEMENTS  BY BOEING AND AIRBUS,  IT ALSO  REFLECTS A LONGER TERM
VIEW THAT THE  MARKET  WILL  CONTINUE  TO GROW UNTIL 2008 AND ONLY THEN TAIL OFF
SOMEWHAT THROUGH 2010.

NOW WE ALL KNOW THAT WHATEVER  HAPPENS  THROUGH 2010 WILL BE DIFFERENT FROM WHAT
WE SEE PROJECTED HERE. HOWEVER,  DIRECTIONALLY,  COMMERCIAL AEROSPACE IS SHOWING
STRENGTH.

SLIDE 12

HOW DOES THIS  TRANSLATE  INTO TITANIUM  CONSUMPTION?  AS WE KNOW, IT HAS A VERY
DIRECT  CORRELATION.  HERE WE SHOW IN BLUE ACTUAL  CONSUMPTION  FROM '96 THROUGH
2003 AND ESTIMATED CONSUMPTION THROUGH 2008 IN GOLD.



WE ARE SUGGESTING THAT 2004  CONSUMPTION WILL BE 127% OF THE AVERAGE OF 2002 AND
2003 LEVELS AND SLIGHTLY HIGHER THAN 2000 LEVELS.  2005 CONSUMPTION IS ESTIMATED
TO BE NEAR THE 2001 AND 1997  PEAKS.  2006 IS SHOWN HERE TO BE A RECORD  YEAR OF
CONSUMPTION, EXCEEDING THE 1997 PEAK BY 6%.

ANOTHER  WAY TO  LOOK  AT THIS IS TO SEE  THAT  WHEN  WE  LOOK  OUT TO THE  NEXT
PROJECTED PEAK IN 2007, INDUSTRY SHIPMENTS INTO THE COMMERCIAL  AEROSPACE SECTOR
MAY NEARLY  DOUBLE TO 29,000  METRIC  TONS FROM A LOW OF 16,000  METRIC  TONS IN
2003.

SLIDE 13

THE CHANGES IN THE  INDUSTRIAL  MARKET  SINCE OUR MEETING IN MONTEREY  HAVE BEEN
LESS DRAMATIC THAN COMMERCIAL AEROSPACE BUT STILL SIGNIFICANT.  POWER GENERATION
HAS MADE A COMEBACK PRIMARILY BECAUSE OF THE CHINESE ECONOMY. GREATER NUMBERS OF
PROJECTS IN  DESALINATION,  THE CHEMICAL PROCESS INDUSTRY AND HEAT TRANSFER HAVE
COME OFF THE DRAWING  BOARDS IN THE LAST 8 - 10 MONTHS,  CREATING A  SIGNIFICANT
UPTURN IN DEMAND FOR THE INDUSTRIAL SECTOR. WHEN WE ADD IN ESTABLISHED  CONSUMER
APPLICATIONS SUCH AS EYEGLASSES, JEWELRY, SPORTING GOODS SUCH AS GOLF CLUBS, AND
MEDICAL  APPLICATIONS SUCH AS IMPLANTS AND ARTIFICIAL JOINTS TO THE "INDUSTRIAL"
CATEGORIZATION,  WE HAVE A SECTOR OF THE TITANIUM INDUSTRY THAT WAS ABOUT 28,000
MT IN 2003 IN TERMS OF MILL PRODUCT SHIPMENTS.

SLIDE 14


LOOKING AHEAD, WE SEE GROWING TITANIUM  INDUSTRIAL  APPLICATIONS  THAT WILL GIVE
STEADY  GROWTH TO OVER 32,000 MT BY 2008.  WE EXPECT THAT THE CHANGES IN VOLUMES
FOR THE INDUSTRIAL  SECTOR WILL BE LESS CYCLICAL THAN THE  COMMERCIAL  AEROSPACE
SECTOR BUT THAT BOTH SECTORS WILL SHOW GROWTH THROUGH 2008.

SLIDE 15

WHILE OTHER  PRESENTERS ARE GOING TO FOCUS ON OVERALL  PRODUCTION  ESTIMATES FOR
THE  INDUSTRY,  I THOUGHT I WOULD THROW OUT AN ESTIMATE  FROM  TIMET'S  POINT OF
VIEW. IN ADDITION TO THE INCREASE IN  INDUSTRIAL/CONSUMER  MARKETS,  AS YOU WILL
HEAR  [HAVE  HEARD]  WE  HAVE  SEEN A  STRONG  INCREASE  IN  MILITARY  AEROSPACE
APPLICATIONS AND EMERGING MARKETS SUCH AS ARCHITECTURE,  AUTOMOTIVE, OIL AND GAS
AND THE ARMOR/ARMAMENT MARKETS.

THIS SLIDE SHOWS ESTIMATED  WORLDWIDE MILL PRODUCT TITANIUM  SHIPMENTS  TOTALING
OVER 56,000 MT IN 2004, ESSENTIALLY EQUIVALENT TO THE LEVEL OF SHIPMENTS IN 1998
AND MOVING  UPWARD  TOWARD THE 61,000 METRIC TONS SHIPPED IN 1997 (THE PEAK YEAR
IN THE INDUSTRY). PLEASE NOTE THAT AEROSPACE HERE INCLUDES MILITARY AEROSPACE.

SLIDE 16


THIS SLIDE SHOWS SIMILAR  SHIPMENT  ESTIMATES BY REGION,  BUT IT ALSO TAKES INTO
CONSIDERATION  MELTED PRODUCT SHIPMENTS.  AS YOU CAN SEE, 2004 ESTIMATES PROVIDE
FOR  APPROXIMATELY  66,000 METRIC TONS,  WHICH IS THE HIGHEST POINT SINCE BEFORE
1998.

IN CONCLUSION,  THE OLD ADAGE "THE MORE THINGS CHANGE,  THE MORE THINGS LOOK THE
SAME"  COMES  TO  MIND  AS WE  LOOK  AT  THESE  STATISTICS.  LAST  YEAR  WE WERE
FORECASTING  THAT THE COMMERCIAL  AEROSPACE MARKET WOULD STABILIZE AND REMAIN AT
LOW LEVELS THROUGH AT LEAST 2005. IT'S QUITE A DIFFERENT  PICTURE TODAY. WE WERE
PROBABLY  OFF BY  12-18  MONTHS  IN THE  COMMERCIAL  AEROSPACE  MARKET.  WE ALSO
PROBABLY  UNDERESTIMATED  GROWTH IN INDUSTRIAL  SECTORS (AT LEAST THOSE OF US IN
THE U.S.  INDUSTRY).  THE STRENGTH OF MILITARY  APPLICATIONS  HAS BEEN LIFTED BY
INTERNATIONAL EVENTS NOT FULLY UNDERSTOOD A YEAR AGO.

AS DIFFICULT AS THE LAST FEW YEARS HAVE BEEN FOR OUR  INDUSTRY,  MUCH OF WHAT WE
DID DURING THIS  DOWNTURN,  IMPROVING OUR  MANUFACTURING  EFFICIENCY,  IMPROVING
YIELDS,  REDUCING  COSTS  GENERALLY  AND  CONTINUOUS  INVESTMENT IN NEW EMERGING
MARKETS WILL SERVE US AND OUR CUSTOMERS IN THIS IMPROVED MARKET ENVIRONMENT.

THANK YOU.






                                                                    EXHIBIT 99.2

TIMET Logo

The Titanium Industry:
Commercial Aerospace and Industrial Markets Overview

Mr. J. Landis Martin

October 2004







Disclaimer
This  presentation  contains  forward-looking  statements and actual results may
differ materially from results  anticipated in the  forward-looking  statements.
These anticipated results and additional risk factors are described from time to
time in the  Company's  filings with the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission,
including its report on Form 10-K for the year ending  December 31, 2003 and its
quarterly reports on Form 10-Q.






Topics for Discussion
Global economic trends
Commercial aerospace markets
Industrial and consumer markets






Economics
U.S. Quarterly GDP - 2001 through Q2 2003 Percent Change from Previous Quarter
[graph]
Source: U.s. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, September 2004






Economics
Europe/Japan GDP - 2001 through Q2 2003
Percent Change from Previous Year or Quarter
[graph]
Source: Dresdner Bank, Economy & Markets, September 2004 and December 2003






Economics
U.S. Quarterly GDP - 2001 through Q2 2004 Percent Change from Previous Quarter
[graph]
Source: U.s. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, September 2004






Economics
Europe/Japan GDP - 2001 through Q2 2004
Percent Change from Previous Year or Quarter
[graph]
Source: Dresdner Bank, Economy & Markets, September 2004 and December 2003






Commercial Aerospace
Large Commercial Aircraft Delivery Forecast
[graph]
Source: The Airline Monitor, January/February 2003 and July 2003
Large Commercial Aircraft include Boeing and Airbus aircraft with specified
seating capacity of 100 or more.






Commercial Aerospace
July Traffic
[graph] Source: ROM Associates






Commercial Aerospace
2004 Traffic Comparison
U.S. Low-Cost v. Legacy Airlines
[graph]
Source: Monthly Traffic Results Press Releases
Low-Cost  Airlines  include  JetBlue,  AirTran, Southwest and Frontier Airlines.
Legacy Carries  include  American,  United,  Delta,
Northwest, Continental and US Airways






Commercial Aerospace
Large Commercial Aircraft Delivery Forecast
[graph]
Source: The Airline Monitor, July 2004, January/February 2004, July 2003
Large Commercial Aircraft include Boeing and Airbus aircraft with specified
seating capacity of 100 or more.






Commercial Aerospace
Titanium Industry Mill Product Shipments
Commercial Aerospace
[graph]
Source: JTS Statistics, Public documents ad TIMET internal estimates based on
the July 2004 The Airline Monitor forecast






Industrial
Increase in "Industrial" demand in 2004 v. 2002:
Power Generation
Desalination
Chemical Process
Heat transfer
Electrochemical
Consumer
Sporting Goods
Medical






Industrial
Titanium Industry Mill Product Shipments
Industrial/Consumer
[graph]
Source: JTS Statistics, Public documents and TIMET internal estimates






By Industry Consuming Sector
Titanium Industry Mill Product Shipments
[graph]
Emerging Markets: Architecture, Automotive, Oil & Gas, Armor/Armament
Source: JTS Statistics, U.S. Bureau of Mines and TIMET internal estimates






By Region
Titanium Industry Mill & Melted Product Shipments
[graph]
Source: JTS Statistics, Public documents, ITA database, CTS Statistics and TIMET
internal estimates






[picture]
Thank you!