Commercial Metals Co. (CMC) delivered a sharp first-quarter earnings beat on Thursday, riding stronger steel margins and construction demand to blow past Wall Street expectations. But the good news came with a caveat: near-term profits are likely headed lower as acquisition costs and the usual seasonal slowdown start to bite. The stock dropped 3.61% in premarket trading to $70.58.
The steel and construction products company reported fiscal first-quarter net earnings of $177.3 million, or $1.58 per diluted share, for the period ended November 30, 2025. On an adjusted basis, earnings came in at $206.2 million, or $1.84 per share, crushing analyst estimates of $1.56. Net sales climbed to $2.120 billion from $1.910 billion a year earlier, also beating the $2.057 billion consensus.
Consolidated core EBITDA surged approximately 52% year-over-year to $316.9 million, with margins hitting 14.9%. The company recorded net after-tax charges of $28.9 million, mainly from expenses related to its CP&P and Foley acquisitions. For context, the prior-year quarter included a much larger $265.0 million after-tax charge tied to a litigation verdict, making this year's comparison look even better.
North America Carries the Load
The North America Steel Group did the heavy lifting this quarter. Steel product shipments totaled 795 thousand tons, compared to 790 thousand tons a year ago and 788 thousand tons in the prior quarter. Adjusted EBITDA jumped 57.9% to $293.9 million, and adjusted EBITDA margin expanded to 17.7% from 12.3%. The real story? Steel product margins increased by $53 per ton sequentially, which is a meaningful bump in this business.
The Construction Solutions Group also showed strength, with net sales rising 17.0% to $198.3 million and adjusted EBITDA climbing 74.7% to $39.6 million. That translated to an adjusted EBITDA margin of 20.0%, which is solid performance in this segment.
Europe was a different story. The Europe Steel Group saw adjusted EBITDA decline to $10.9 million from $25.8 million, with margins falling to 4.4% from 12.3%. The culprits? A much smaller CO2 credit of $15.6 million compared to $44.1 million in the prior year, plus maintenance outages that crimped production.
Balance Sheet and Capital Allocation
Commercial Metals reported cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash of $3.0 billion as of November 30, 2025, with available liquidity of nearly $1.9 billion. Operating cash flow came in at $204.2 million, while long-term debt stood at $3.305 billion.
The company repurchased 663,220 shares for $38.9 million during the quarter, leaving $166.1 million remaining under its buyback authorization. It also declared a quarterly dividend of 18 cents per share, payable February 2, 2026.




