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 announced an intent to offer to sell $2,000 million aggregate principal of senior unsecured notes in an offering exempt from SEC registration. The company plans to use the net proceeds to fund the purchase price of the previously announced Foley Products acquisition, pay transaction-related fees and expenses, and for general corporate purposes.
The notes offering is not conditioned on the acquisition and will be completed before it; the acquisition is also not contingent on the notes. If the Foley acquisition is not completed on or prior to October 15, 2026, or if the purchase agreement is terminated earlier, the company will be required to redeem all notes at 100% of the initial issue price plus accrued and unpaid interest to, but not including, the special mandatory redemption date.
Commercial Metals also furnished Foley’s audited 2024 and 2023 financial statements, unaudited nine-month 2025 and 2024 results, and excerpts from the preliminary offering memorandum and investor presentation as exhibits.
Commercial Metals Company amended its credit agreement. The Limited Consent and Second Amendment permits borrowings under a 364‑day senior unsecured Bridge Facility of up to $1.85 billion and adjusts default terms so that certain monetary judgments will not constitute an event of default. Except for these changes, the existing terms remain in place.
The company’s existing revolving credit facility remains at $600.0 million, with its maturity previously extended to October 26, 2029. In connection with the amendment, the company also amended and restated its financing commitment to eliminate a previously contemplated $600.0 million senior secured backstop revolving facility. The amendment provides flexibility to access the bridge financing while keeping the core revolver unchanged.
Commercial Metals Co. (CMC) officer Brian N. Halloran reported an open-market sale of 6,232 shares of common stock on 10/31/2025 at a price of $59.87 per share (transaction code S).
Following the transaction, he reported 58,055 shares beneficially owned with direct ownership. His title is SVP, N. America Steel Group.
Commercial Metals Company announced board and leadership changes. Director Sarah E. Raiss, who has served since 2011, will retire and not stand for re-election at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders scheduled for January 14, 2026. The company stated her decision was not due to any disagreement regarding operations, policies, or practices. Separately, Jennifer J. Durbin will resign as Senior Vice President, Chief Human Resources and Communications Officer, effective December 31, 2025, to pursue another opportunity.
CMC received a Rule 144 notice for a proposed sale of 6,232 common shares, with an aggregate market value of $373,119.85. The filer plans to execute through Fidelity Brokerage Services LLC, with an approximate sale date of 10/31/2025 on the NYSE.
The shares were acquired via restricted stock vesting on three dates: 10/09/2025 (1,032 shares), 10/10/2025 (1,131 shares), and 10/14/2025 (4,069 shares), all noted as compensation. As a reference point, 110,968,083 shares were stated as outstanding.
Commercial Metals (CMC) director John R. McPherson reported open‑market purchases on a Form 4. On 10/20/2025, he bought 1,712 shares at $58.09 and 10 shares at $58.68 (Transaction Code P).
Following these trades, beneficial ownership stood at 6,722 shares indirect (by a limited partnership) and 16,510 shares direct. The filing indicates it was submitted by one reporting person and confirms his role as a director.
BlackRock, Inc. filed Amendment No. 3 to Schedule 13G reporting beneficial ownership of 13,705,272 shares of Commercial Metals Company (CMC) common stock, representing 12.2% of the class. The event date triggering this filing is 09/30/2025.
BlackRock reports 13,324,892 shares with sole voting power and 13,705,272 shares with sole dispositive power, with 0 shared voting or dispositive power. The filing states the securities were acquired and are held in the ordinary course of business and not to change or influence control. It also notes various persons may receive dividends or sale proceeds related to these securities, with no single person over five percent.
Commercial Metals Company (CMC) filed its annual report, outlining its vertically integrated steel and construction solutions business across three segments: North America Steel Group, Emerging Businesses Group, and Europe Steel Group. The company is constructing a fourth EAF micro mill in Berkeley County, West Virginia, and expects to begin melt shop production during 2026.
Downstream products backlog was $1.4 billion at August 31, 2025. The aggregate market value of common stock held by non‑affiliates was approximately $5.5 billion on February 28, 2025. As of October 14, 2025, 110,968,083 shares were outstanding. In 2025, environmental costs were $58.4 million and environmental capital expenditures were $4.7 million, with approximately $2 million anticipated for new environmental projects in 2026. The company reported approximately 12,690 employees and highlighted continued improvements in safety performance.
Commercial Metals Company (CMC) reported insider equity activity by its SVP, Chief Legal Officer & Sec on 10/14/2025. The filing shows 8,593 performance shares settled and a new grant of 10,599 restricted stock units that vest in three equal installments beginning on the first anniversary. To satisfy tax withholding tied to these settlements, 1,385 shares and 3,382 shares were withheld at $59.1. After these transactions, the officer directly held 78,752 common shares.
Commercial Metals Company (CMC) SVP & Chief Financial Officer Paul J. Lawrence filed a Form 4 for transactions on 10/14/2025. Acquisitions included 14,467 performance shares from a prior award settlement and a new grant of 14,170 restricted stock units vesting in three equal installments beginning on the first anniversary of the grant date.
To cover taxes on settlements, CMC withheld 2,004 shares and 5,693 shares at $59.10 per share. After these transactions, Lawrence beneficially owned 219,009 shares. This figure includes 498 shares acquired under the Employee Stock Purchase Plan.