Commercial Metals Company (CMC) is gearing up to report first-quarter earnings before the market opens on Thursday, January 8, 2025. The steel and metals company has caught the attention of analysts and income-focused investors alike.
Wall Street expects quarterly earnings of $1.54 per share, which would represent a substantial jump from the 78 cents per share reported in the same period last year. Revenue projections are equally optimistic, with the consensus estimate sitting at $2.05 billion compared to $1.91 billion a year earlier.
The bullish sentiment got a boost on December 10 when Jefferies analyst Christopher LeFemina upgraded Commercial Metals from Hold to Buy and bumped the price target from $70 to $78.
The Dividend Math
Beyond the earnings excitement, some investors are looking at CMC through a different lens: dividend income. The company currently offers an annual dividend yield of 0.97%, paying out 18 cents per share quarterly, which translates to 72 cents annually.
So what would it take to pocket $500 every month from Commercial Metals dividends? Let's work through the numbers.
First, we need $6,000 per year ($500 multiplied by 12 months). Take that annual target and divide it by CMC's 72-cent annual dividend: $6,000 divided by $0.72 equals 8,333 shares.
Bottom line: You'd need to own approximately 8,333 shares of Commercial Metals, worth about $621,725 at current prices, to generate $500 in monthly dividend income.
If that sounds steep, consider a more modest target of $100 monthly, or $1,200 annually. Using the same calculation gives us $1,200 divided by $0.72, which equals 1,667 shares, or about $124,375 worth of stock.
Understanding Dividend Yields
Here's the thing about dividend yields: they're not static. The yield moves inversely with the stock price, even if the actual dividend payment stays the same.
Think of it this way. If a stock pays $2 annually and trades at $50, the yield is 4%. But if the stock climbs to $60, that same $2 dividend now yields just 3.33%. Flip the scenario and have the stock drop to $40, and suddenly you're looking at a 5% yield.
And that's just from price changes. Companies can also increase or decrease their dividend payments, which directly impacts the yield regardless of where the stock trades.
Recent Trading Action
Shares of Commercial Metals gained 2.6% on Tuesday, closing at $74.61. With earnings just around the corner, investors will be watching to see if the company can deliver on those optimistic analyst projections.




