Santos share price steadies after new ASX filing; what investors watch next

February 25, 2026
Santos share price steadies after new ASX filing; what investors watch next

Sydney, Feb 25, 2026, 18:10 AEDT — The session has wrapped up.

  • Santos edged 0.15% higher to finish at A$6.82, while Brent added roughly 0.7%.
  • According to a fresh filing, 9,911 unquoted share rights lapsed from Jan 10 through Feb 4.
  • Attention shifts to project launches and the dividend following last week’s full-year results.

Santos Ltd (STO.AX) finished Wednesday at A$6.82, up 0.15%, as crude prices strengthened and the Australian oil and gas producer lodged a new securities filing. Brent crude rose roughly 0.7% for the session.

It’s a minor filing, market-wise, yet it circles back to the big question dogging the stock: can Santos actually turn its project pipeline into cash flow by 2026—and keep payouts on track, even as oil prices whipsaw?

With most of reporting season now in the rearview mirror, expectations have been more or less locked in. From this point, it’s all about execution: costs, timing, and output volumes will drive the stock. If there’s any hint that management incentives aren’t lining up with results, that’s what could tip the balance.

Santos, in an Appendix 3H notice dated Feb. 25, reported that 9,911 unlisted “share acquisition rights” had lapsed after certain conditions weren’t satisfied. The company said the rights expired between Jan. 10 and Feb. 4, with no consideration paid for their lapse. Company Announcements

Santos has just wrapped up its full-year numbers from Feb. 18, posting $1.8 billion in free cash flow from operations and locking in a final dividend of 10.3 U.S. cents per share. CEO Kevin Gallagher pointed to an “all-in break even oil price of $45-50/bbl to 2030” as the firm’s target. The company also reaffirmed that Alaska’s Pikka phase 1 is still lined up for first oil late in the opening quarter of 2026.

The straightforward gains might already be in the rearview mirror. Should crude pull back, or if Pikka’s commissioning timeline wobbles, investors could quickly begin scrutinizing the dividend and debt paydown speed—particularly if costs edge up above forecasts.

Traders are watching for operational updates on Pikka as it approaches its late Q1 2026 start-up window. Any tweaks to guidance that shift this year’s cash-flow outlook could quickly reset expectations.

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