Fortescue Ltd Stock Jumps 4% as China’s BHP Curbs Lift Iron Ore Prices

Fortescue Ltd Stock Jumps 4% as China’s BHP Curbs Lift Iron Ore Prices

March 13, 2026

Melbourne, March 14, 2026, 08:43 AEDT

Fortescue Ltd surged 4.1% to A$20.49 late Friday, as China tightened restrictions on BHP’s iron ore, sending prices for the commodity to a two-month peak and fueling talk that Fortescue could come out ahead.

It matters now: China is still Fortescue’s main customer, and state-owned China Mineral Resources Group, or CMRG, handles ore purchases for over half the steel mills in the country. Fortescue has been working for months to strengthen its connection there. CEO Dino Otranto, back in January, said the partnership had to get “much more comprehensive.” Reuters

This isn’t a straightforward trade. On Friday, Beijing lifted its ban on BHP’s Jimblebar fines — but only for about a week, and just for steel mills. That’s a clear signal: officials are prepared to intervene if iron ore prices spike. Should those supply worries subside, some of the gains at Fortescue could just as easily reverse.

Rio Tinto jumped 3.1% on Friday, but BHP slipped 2.3%. That left Fortescue chalking up the biggest swing among the top Australian iron ore players. The divergence underscored just how fast investors recalibrate when access to China appears to shift—China remains the sector’s key bellwether.

Fortescue dropped a new company filing to shareholders Thursday, setting the DRP share price at A$19.2518 for its upcoming interim dividend. That dividend, worth A$0.62 per share, is due out on March 30. The dividend reinvestment plan gives investors an option for shares over cash.

The announcement landed after Fortescue delivered a half-yearly earnings beat back on Feb. 25. Underlying net profit jumped 23% to $1.91 billion, fueled by record ore shipments and stronger pricing. “Our products are moving well. We expect that to continue,” Otranto told analysts on the earnings call. Reuters

The gain was particularly notable given the broader market’s lackluster showing. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 slipped 0.1% to close at 8,617.10 on Friday, banks lending some support but losses from miners dragging the index lower.

Fortescue keeps working to expand beyond iron ore. The company wrapped up its Alta Copper buyout on March 10, taking full control of the Cañariaco project in Peru. “Copper is a core pillar” of Fortescue’s diversification plans, Growth and Energy CEO Gus Pichot said. Global

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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