Melbourne, March 14, 2026, 08:43 AEDT
Fortescue Ltd shares climbed 4.1% late Friday to A$20.49, after China’s widening curbs on rival BHP’s iron ore helped push the steelmaking raw material to a two-month high and sharpened bets that Fortescue would be one of the main winners. 1
That matters now because China remains Fortescue’s key market, and the state-backed China Mineral Resources Group, or CMRG, buys ore on behalf of more than half of the country’s steel mills. Fortescue has spent months deepening those ties, with CEO Dino Otranto saying in January the relationship needed to become “much more comprehensive.” 2
But the trade is not one-way. Beijing temporarily eased one ban on BHP’s Jimblebar fines on Friday for about a week, limiting the relief to steel mills, a sign officials are willing to step in when iron ore prices run too hard. If supply fears fade, some of Fortescue’s gain could unwind just as quickly. 3
Rio Tinto rose 3.1% on Friday, while BHP fell 2.3%, leaving Fortescue with the sharpest move among the big Australian iron ore names. The split showed how quickly investors are re-pricing any shift in access to China, which still sets the tone for the sector. 4
Fortescue also gave shareholders a fresh company filing on Thursday. It set the price under its dividend reinvestment plan, or DRP — a scheme that lets investors take shares instead of cash — at A$19.2518 for the interim dividend of A$0.62 a share, payable on March 30. 5
That update followed a stronger half-year report on Feb. 25, when Fortescue posted a 23% rise in underlying net profit to $1.91 billion on record shipments and higher prices for the ore it sells. On the earnings call, Otranto said, “Our products are moving well. We expect that to continue.” 6
The gain also stood out against a weak broader market. Australia’s benchmark S&P/ASX 200 ended Friday down 0.1% at 8,617.10, as losses across much of the mining sector outweighed support from banks. 7
Fortescue is still trying to broaden the story beyond iron ore. It completed the Alta Copper acquisition on March 10, giving it full ownership of Peru’s Cañariaco project, and Growth and Energy CEO Gus Pichot said “Copper is a core pillar” of the group’s diversification push. 8