Welcome to our dedicated page for Commercial Metals Co SEC filings (Ticker: CMC), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
The Commercial Metals Company (CMC) SEC filings page brings together the company’s regulatory disclosures as a New York Stock Exchange–listed issuer in the iron and steel mills and ferroalloy manufacturing industry. Through its Exchange Act and Securities Act filings, CMC provides detailed information on its financial condition, governance, financing arrangements and significant corporate events.
Current reports on Form 8-K show how CMC uses SEC filings to document material developments. Recent 8-K filings describe the announcement of quarterly financial results and the availability of related investor presentations, the declaration of regular quarterly cash dividends, and the completion of acquisitions such as Concrete Pipe & Precast, LLC (CP&P) and Foley Products Company, LLC. Other 8-Ks outline key financing actions, including entry into and amendments of the company’s revolving credit facility, the pricing and closing of 5.75% Senior Notes due 2033 and 6.00% Senior Notes due 2035, and the use of proceeds to fund acquisitions and related obligations.
CMC’s proxy statement on Schedule 14A provides additional context on corporate governance, director elections, advisory votes on executive compensation and the appointment of the independent registered public accounting firm. The company’s filings also incorporate risk factor discussions, forward-looking statement disclosures and references to its annual report on Form 10-K for comprehensive financial and risk information.
On Stock Titan, CMC filings are updated as they are released to EDGAR, and AI-powered tools can help summarize lengthy documents such as 8-Ks, proxy statements and, when filed, Forms 10-K and 10-Q. Users can quickly identify items related to acquisitions, new debt issuances, credit facility amendments, dividend declarations and other material events. For those analyzing CMC stock, these filings provide a structured view of how the company finances growth, manages capital structure and reports on its construction-focused steel and precast concrete operations.
Commercial Metals Company director Dawne S. Hickton reported equity awards of company common stock. On January 14, 2026, she received 1,111 restricted stock units that vest on a 1:1 basis into common stock and will be distributed after her service as a director ends, based on her distribution election.
On the same date, she also received a separate restricted stock award of 1,111 common shares that vests on the first anniversary of the grant date. Both awards are shown at a grant price of $74.26 per share, and following these grants she directly held 2,761 shares of Commercial Metals common stock.
COMMERCIAL METALS Co director Dennis V. Arriola reported an equity award in company stock. On 01/14/2026, he received 2,222 shares of common stock at $74.26 per share, reported as an acquisition.
According to the footnote, this represents a grant of restricted stock units that vest on a 1:1 basis into common stock and will be distributed after his service as a director ends, based on his distribution election. Following this grant, he beneficially owned 7,238 shares of COMMERCIAL METALS Co common stock directly.
Commercial Metals Company reported a strong turnaround for the quarter ended November 30, 2025. Net sales rose to $2.12 billion from $1.91 billion, and the company moved from a net loss of $175.7 million a year ago to net earnings of $177.3 million. Basic EPS improved from a loss of $(1.54) to earnings of $1.60.
Profitability benefited from higher segment results and the absence of the prior year’s $350 million litigation charge, with current period litigation expense limited to $3.7 million of post‑judgment interest. Adjusted EBITDA increased across North America Steel Group, Construction Solutions Group and Europe Steel Group, led by North America.
The company significantly expanded its balance sheet to support growth. It issued $1.0 billion of 5.750% notes due 2033 and $1.0 billion of 6.000% notes due 2035, lifting long‑term debt to $3.31 billion and boosting cash, restricted cash and cash equivalents to $3.03 billion. These proceeds helped fund the $675 million CP&P acquisition and the approximately $1.84 billion Foley Acquisition, both adding a large precast concrete platform to the Construction Solutions Group.
Commercial Metals Company reported that it has released its financial results for the first quarter of fiscal 2026 through a press release. The company also prepared a financial presentation covering the same period and made it available on its website.
Both the press release and the financial presentation are furnished as exhibits to this report and are not treated as filed for liability purposes under securities laws. Investors can review detailed first-quarter 2026 results and commentary in Exhibit 99.1 and Exhibit 99.2.
Commercial Metals Company director reports small share grant from board fees. A company director acquired 504 shares of Commercial Metals common stock on 01/02/2026 at a price of $71.79 per share. These shares were issued at the director’s election in lieu of the quarterly cash retainer for board and committee service.
Following this transaction, the director beneficially owned 25,972 shares of Commercial Metals common stock, held as a direct ownership position.
Commercial Metals Company director reports stock award in lieu of cash fees. A board member of COMMERCIAL METALS Co (ticker CMC) reported receiving 487 shares of common stock on 01/02/2026. The shares were issued at the director’s election instead of the quarterly cash retainer for board and committee service at a reported price of $71.79 per share.
After this grant, the director beneficially owns 17,032 shares of CMC common stock directly and 6,722 shares indirectly through a limited partnership. The filing reflects routine equity-based compensation for board service rather than an open‑market purchase or sale.
Commercial Metals Company disclosed that its board of directors has declared a regular quarterly cash dividend of $0.18 per share on its common stock. The dividend is scheduled to be paid on February 2, 2026 to shareholders who are on record as of the close of business on January 19, 2026. This continues the company’s practice of returning cash to shareholders through ongoing quarterly dividends.
Commercial Metals Company officer files initial ownership report. A senior vice president of the Precast Group at Commercial Metals Company submitted an initial ownership filing covering an event dated 12/15/2025. The report shows beneficial ownership of 0 shares of common stock in direct form and does not list any derivative securities. The filing is made by one reporting person in the capacity of an officer, providing a baseline disclosure of this insider's current equity position.
Commercial Metals Company increased the borrowing capacity of its revolving credit facility under its Sixth Amended and Restated Credit Agreement from $600.0 million to $1.0 billion and extended the facility’s maturity from October 26, 2029 to December 17, 2030.
The Third Amendment, dated December 17, 2025, also allows the company, subject to certain conditions, to request additional increases in the revolver and/or the establishment of one or more new term loan commitments in a combined amount not exceeding $250.0 million, while all other credit agreement terms remain the same.
Commercial Metals Company completed its acquisition of the Foley Companies for a cash purchase price of $1.84 billion. The deal gives Commercial Metals full ownership of Holdco and Oaktree Blocker, bringing the Foley operations under its control.
The company funded the acquisition using proceeds from two senior unsecured note offerings: $1.0 billion of 5.750% notes due November 2033 and $1.0 billion of 6.000% notes due December 2035. The note proceeds were first placed in escrow and then released at closing, which brought the commitments under a previously arranged $1.85 billion bridge loan facility down to zero and led to termination of that commitment letter.
Commercial Metals plans to file separate financial statements for the acquired business and related pro forma financial information by amendment, no later than 71 days after this report was required to be filed, giving investors a clearer view of the combined company’s financial profile.