Full-Time
Posted on 9/25/2025
Produces steel products and building systems
No salary listed
Logan, UT, USA
In Person
Candidates must be willing to relocate to an assigned sales territory upon completion of the program.
Nucor manufactures and sells a wide range of steel products, including bars, beams, sheets, and plates, and operates custom-engineered metal building systems through American Buildings Company. Its offerings cover construction, automotive, and industrial sectors, and the company has expanded its portfolio with acquisitions like Rytec high-performance doors. Nucor combines standard steelmaking with value-added building solutions to provide integrated material supply and building systems. Its goal is to deliver sustained value for customers and shareholders by focusing on reliable products, environmental responsibility, and steady dividends.
Company Size
5,001-10,000
Company Stage
IPO
Headquarters
Charlotte, North Carolina
Founded
1940
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Health Insurance
Dental Insurance
Vision Insurance
Disability Insurance
401(k) Retirement Plan
401(k) Company Match
Profit Sharing
Paid Parental Leave
Tuition Reimbursement
Commercial Metals Company received positive commentary from Jim Cramer during a discussion of market movements following an Iran ceasefire. However, Cramer recommended Nucor over Commercial Metals, stating he believes Nucor could reach $200 per share. Commercial Metals processes and recycles scrap metal whilst manufacturing finished steel products and armour plates. The company reported Q2 2026 earnings on 26 March, posting non-GAAP earnings per share of $1.16, missing estimates by $0.14. Revenue reached $2.13 billion, up nearly 22% year-over-year and beating estimates by $60 million. Management expects to generate between $165 million and $175 million in EBITDA for fiscal year 2026.
Nucor names new CFO. Published February 22, 2026 Nucor Corp., Charlotte, North Carolina, has promoted John L. (Jack) Sullivan from vice president, treasurer and general manager of investor relations to chief financial officer (CFO), treasurer and executive vice president effective March 1, 2026. Sullivan replaces Steve Laxton as CFO of the electric arc furnace steelmaking and metals recycling company after Laxton was promoted to president and chief operating officer effective this Jan. 1. Nucor says the 52-year-old Sullivan began his career with the company in 2022 as its general manager of investor relations and was promoted to the additional roles in 2025. Before joining Nucor, Sullivan worked for North Carolina-based Duke Energy and in the investment banking department of Bank of America. "Jack will be a great addition to the executive leadership team," says Leon Topalian, Nucor's board chair and CEO. "He is an accomplished leader whose strong financial acumen and strategic insight position him well to advance Nucor's mission of creating sustainable long-term value for our shareholders, customers, teammates and the communities we serve." Adds Topalian, "I would also like to thank Steve Laxton, who will continue as our president and chief operating officer, for his leadership as CFO during this transition period." Nucor makes recycled-content steel, downstream steel products and operates metal recycling facilities, predominantly in the United States with a presence in Canada and Mexico. In the recycling sector, Nucor owns Cincinnati-based David J. Joseph Co. (DJJ) and it describes itself as North America's largest recycler. Sponsored Content Engineered Recycling Systems delivers high-efficiency wire chopping lines, ASR, and fines downstream metals recovery solutions for maximum copper, aluminum, and precious metals recovery. Whether you need a new system or want to upgrade an existing chop line, ASR system, or process shredder wire, ERS recovers all the metals. Get curated news on YOUR industry. Enter your email to receive our newsletters.
2026 Circular Steel Summit: the view from Nucor. Published February 17, 2026 | Updated February 18, 2026 As Dan Needham put it at the 2026 Fastmarkets Circular Steel Summit in Houston, the excitement from reports of marginal growth in the construction sector this year comes when you drill down into the details. Specifically, during his Keynote Fireside Chat on Jan. 29, the executive vice president at Charlotte, North Carolina-based steelmaker Nucor Corp. pointed to a predicted rise in nonresidential construction in the United States. "It's data centers, it's energy," Needham said of what could be driving that modest growth. "And it's not just things like natural gas or LNG, but renewables are still strong today. When you look at energy transmission, anything supporting that market is very good." Additionally, he said he sees growth in infrastructure projects, such as bridges, arenas and more. "All of those are good signs and markets where we see things are moving." Looking inward. In terms of its own projects, Needham said Nucor entered this year with a backlog 40 percent higher than 2025, adding that some product groups currently have record backlogs. "There's excitement about where markets are going," he said. "Since 2020, Nucor has invested nearly $20 billion, and we're coming near the investment of that investment campaign." Looking at strong markets where Nucor can play a role, Needham used data centers as an example. "Today, we can do the shell of a data center and have the breadth of capabilities to do that. But we've also added insulated metal panels. And if you look at the inside, where a lot of the value is, we have the ability to do coordinated systems today. So, 95 percent or greater of the steel needs going into the data center we have the capabilities of providing." Going further, when looking at the transmission of natural gas, for example, Needham pointed to Nucor's plate mill in Brandenburg, Kentucky, which produces the steel used in line pipe. "We can go wider and thicker and provide a lot of the line pipe product needs in the market," he said, adding that the Brandenburg facility allows the company to supply armored plate and other grades for the defense industry. On the steel sheet side of its operations, Needham highlighted Nucor's electric arc furnace (EAF) facility in Apple Grove, West Virginia, which he said is expected to come online this year. He noted the company also is investing in the development of galvanizing lines. "These are really aimed at the automotive market and consumer verticals, and I think when we talk about markets, automotive is one that's holding its own," Needham said. "The reason we're interested is we're underrepresented in that market and that's about one-third of the sheet market. We have an opportunity to grow in that market and that's absolutely a focus that we have." The tariff effect. Looking at the international trade landscape and the Trump administration's tariff regimen, Needham said it was important to look at the macro sense of why such decisions were made regarding duties on imports. Citing a tariff-oriented panel discussion that had already taken place at the conference that described the disappearance of free trade and free markets in the U.S., Needham said those markets went away a long time ago. "The U.S. still tried to play by free market conditions, but the rest of the world doesn't," he said. "If you look at the world today, we have over 600 million metric tons of excess steel capacity - that's roughly six times the U.S. market. That's insane, and that's continuing to rise." Needham said the way to deal with such "nonmarket conditions" are Section 232 tariffs and different trade agreements, which the administration bolstered last February. "If you look at the 232s, since they've been enacted, at the beginning of [2025], about 25 percent of the finished steel market in the U.S. was supported by imports," he said. "Fast forward to October and that's down to 16 percent. The estimate for November is 14 percent and it's continuing to fall. So, the 232 is doing what it's intended to do." Needham said he envisions a continued reduction in imports this year and paid particular attention to trade agreements the administration has announced with several Asian countries. "You add it up, the total investment committed, verbally, is $9.6 trillion in foreign investment in the United States," he said. "That's a lot of money. We haven't seen what that's going to be made up of, because that doesn't exist. Where that gets invested, I think we all have an opportunity to try to put that where it's needed." Assuming that money materializes, Needham suggested it could go toward bringing forging, fabrication and the production of derivatives back to the U.S., for example. "That's our opportunity to help engage the administration and others to direct funds where the market needs them," he said. "We can help push market needs instead of regulatory needs." Considering carbon. On the topic of green steel, Needham said the U.S. market is driven by market demand, needs and dynamics, and transparency is paramount. "We need transparency around what the embodied carbon amount is [in steel products]," he said. "We don't want to compete with other steel, we want to compete with aluminum, carbon fibers, etc. If we can report embodied carbon, that can provide the transparency we need." Sponsored Content Engineered Recycling Systems delivers high-efficiency wire chopping lines, ASR, and fines downstream metals recovery solutions for maximum copper, aluminum, and precious metals recovery. Whether you need a new system or want to upgrade an existing chop line, ASR system, or process shredder wire, ERS recovers all the metals. Years ago, while some companies set ambitious 2030 net-zero targets for their operations, Needham said Nucor opted to let the market dictate where it was headed. "Four to five years ago, the way to get to net-zero was to offer carbon offsets," he said. "So, we offered our Econiq product. Somewhere between 20-30 percent of that was going to be offsets, but the market quickly evolved. "We look at sustainability as a journey. It's not going to happen today; it's not going to happen next year. It's going to evolve over the long-term." Regarding Nucor's Econiq offering, Needham said customers "just wanted to have it," adding that companies can buy carbon offsets or renewable energy credits from the market at around $2 per ton, but that wasn't a market reflection. "We didn't do that," he said. "We wanted a better product. We only offered the credits we created." Needham said he believes the market needs to go where transparency is, and that the industry is headed toward what he described as actionable steps called the "decarb menu." "What everybody was saying was that by 2030, 2040, 2050, we're going to be net-zero," he said. "I don't know what that means. I can't act on that. Frankly, I don't think they knew what that meant. We've got to get to actionable steps. What I can act on is, let's say that by 2030 you want to go from 1,000 kilograms of CO[2] per ton of steel to 600. We can do that today. We can measure that. And you can go to your customers and say, 'I have a better product for you and here's what you can look at.' That's where we see the markets going, and that's where we see market-driven decisions making an impact." Needham continued that offsets would always have a place, and that decision lies with each individual business considering them. However, he said he sees two types of actors in the markets: those who pivot where the winds blow and those with a specific reason to make a decision. "We want to make the future better," he said. "If [customers] want offsets on their journey, we'll provide them." Get curated news on YOUR industry. Enter your email to receive our newsletters.
CNBC's Jim Cramer identified five stocks significantly impacted by President Donald Trump's policies, with mixed results depending on their sector. Major health insurers took severe hits on Tuesday, with UnitedHealth and Humana plummeting over 20%, whilst CVS Health dropped 14%. The decline followed the administration's proposal for nearly flat Medicare Advantage reimbursement rates in 2027, far below analysts' expectations of 4% to 6% increases. Conversely, General Motors benefited from relaxed environmental regulations, posting better-than-expected earnings and closing up 8.75%. Steel producer Nucor also gained from expanded Section 232 tariffs reducing steel imports, though shares fell 2.3% after slightly missing earnings expectations. Cramer noted the market increasingly resembles a command economy where companies must accept presidential terms or face consequences.
Nucor Corporation (NYSE: NUE) announced today that it has successfully completed its acquisition of Cornerstone Building Brands' insulated metal panels (IMP) business for a cash purchase price of approximately $1 billion , subject to customary adjustments. The Nucor management team is in place and the CENTRIA and Metl-Span brands acquired from Cornerstone Building Brands are now a part of the newly created Insulated Panel Group , which also includes the Company's existing IMP business, TrueCore. "We are excited to officially welcome our CENTRIA and Metl-Span teammates as part of the Nucor team," said Jeff Carmean , President of Nucor Insulated Panel Group . "Adding these two brands to our Insulated Panel Group will allow us to provide our customers with a full range of products to service high-end architectural applications, as well as the quickly expanding cold storage and warehousing markets." About Nucor Nucor and its affiliates are manufacturers of steel and steel products,