Sydney—March 14, 2026, 10:43 AEDT.
Suncorp Group wrapped up Friday’s session up 2.6%, outpacing the broader Australian market’s dip. Shares finished at A$15.62, notching a gain from A$15.23, as the S&P/ASX 200 eased 0.14% to 8,617.10. The interim dividend for Suncorp is scheduled for March 31. 1
This matters: Suncorp shares are still digging out of the hole left by Feb. 18, when first-half cash earnings cratered 67% and the stock tumbled up to 5.4%. After offloading its banking operations to ANZ in 2024, Suncorp stands as a pure general insurer—meaning weather shocks, price shifts and capital returns now drive the story. Queensland’s latest floods have put those exposures right back in focus. 2
Suncorp reported at its half-year mark that it’s put A$168 million into its on-market buyback since September, with the full A$400 million target still in sight for fiscal 2026. Chief executive Steve Johnston pointed to the group’s “disciplined approach to capital management” as the reason for the buyback’s steady pace. The board also declared a fully franked interim dividend at 17 Australian cents per share, with tax credits for local investors, and set a March 31 payment date. 3
Johnston expects gross written premium—a gauge of premium volume—to land near the lower end of the mid-single-digit range in fiscal 2026. Suncorp maintained its view that the underlying insurance trading ratio, which tracks core underwriting margin, should remain in the upper half of the 10% to 12% range. 3
Insurers kept pace Friday. Insurance Australia Group jumped 3.3% to A$7.25, up from A$7.02, while QBE Insurance nudged higher—closing at A$20.52, a 0.6% lift from A$20.39. IAG late last month announced a A$200 million buyback alongside its half-year numbers. 4
Conditions on the ground are messy. Suncorp on Friday reported roughly 480 claims linked to severe weather across Queensland and the Northern Territory—over 400 of those are for homes. The company has dispatched employees and rolled out a mobile disaster-response hub to Bundaberg. 5
“This week, the region saw its worst flooding in years,” said Alli Smith, executive general manager for home claims at the company. Consumer insurance chief Lisa Harrison, in a separate statement, said the industry continued to advocate for “stronger, practical resilience measures”—pointing to flood levees and home upgrades—as ways to keep insurance costs in check. 5
The bounce faces a real threat: Suncorp’s natural-hazard bill for the first half hit A$1.32 billion—blowing past its allowance by about A$453 million. Management has already scaled back the premium-growth target for fiscal 2026, now guiding for the lower end of mid-single digits. A fresh wave of big catastrophe claims could slam the recovery fast. 2