South32 Shares Slip From One-Year Peak as Traders Watch Next Move

South32 Shares Slip From One-Year Peak as Traders Watch Next Move

June 7, 2026

SYDNEY, June 8, 2026, 06:04 (AEST)

  • South32 closed at A$4.63 on Friday, losing 3.7% for the week. The stock hit A$4.95 on Wednesday.
  • The ASX stays closed Monday for the King’s Birthday holiday. Any moves in the stock will wait until trading resumes Tuesday.
  • Aluminium and copper prices are still strong, supporting the case. But manganese disruption and cost inflation are still risks to watch.

South32 Ltd. is down from its midweek high, with the miner’s shares slipping ahead of the ASX holiday. A reversal in mining stocks stalled a rally that earlier sent South32 to a one-year high.

The shares finished Friday at A$4.63, down 2.53% for the session, Google Finance showed. They’re off 3.74% over the last week, according to Intelligent Investor, but still ahead 30.42% for 2026 after touching a 52-week high of A$4.95 on June 3. That’s the top level in a year.

Market timing is a factor with no Monday price discovery. The Australian Securities Exchange will close on June 8 for the King’s Birthday holiday, according to its 2026 calendar, which means no settlement that day.

ASX finishes week lower as metals slide. The S&P/ASX 200 was off 0.70% Friday at 8,625.1, dragged by a 2.31% drop in materials. Copper and aluminium gave back gains after strong runs, according to Market Index. South32 slipped 2.5%, matching BHP’s 2.5% fall, while Rio Tinto dropped 1.9%.

South32’s support case remains. Official London Metal Exchange prices from Westmetall showed aluminium at $3,736 a ton for cash settlement, with copper at $13,731 a ton on June 5. Those prices keep the company exposed to a firm industrial-metals tape.

Aluminium prices jumped to a four-year high after fresh supply worries in the Middle East, which controls 9% of global smelting capacity, Reuters said on June 1. Britannia Global Markets called aluminium “the standout story” right now, citing a serious market squeeze. That’s part of the reason investors piled into South32 earlier this week. Reuters

South32 execs have repeated a similar message. On the H1 call, Chief Executive Graham Kerr told investors operations are “performing to plan” and gaining from stronger commodity prices. Deputy CEO-elect Matt Daley said the focus is on lifting performance, handling risk and making smart capital calls. Investing

Valuation is tight, too. Google Finance lists the average 12-month analyst target for the stock at A$4.87, just 5% up from Friday’s A$4.63 close. Out of 11 analysts, 10 rate it a buy and one is at hold. There’s not much cushion if the stock stumbles after its recent rise.

The trade comes with complications. South32 in April cut its fiscal 2026 Australia Manganese production targets to 3 million wet metric tons after rain and Cyclone Narelle hit the GEMCO site in the Northern Territory. South32 also said at the time that Middle East tensions may push up freight and raw materials costs. The company said it “implemented measures” to handle supply-chain issues and is watching diesel supplies. Reuters

Macro risk goes both ways. A solid U.S. jobs report on Friday raised expectations for more rate hikes and sent global stocks down, Reuters said. Gary Schlossberg, market strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute, said the firm U.S. economy “adds to inflation risk coming from the Gulf,” which could keep the dollar strong and weigh on risk assets such as miners. Reuters

South32 investors look to Tuesday’s reopen to see if buyers step in after Friday’s selloff in materials, or if weakness keeps up with copper and aluminium still falling. Market direction seems set by metals prices, ongoing ASX materials shifts, Middle East-related cost pressures, and the appetite for cyclical miners, rather than a fresh company move.

Stock Market Today

  • ASX Stocks Undervalued Below Intrinsic Value in June 2026 Amid Market Uncertainty
    June 7, 2026, 3:44 PM EDT. Amid mixed signals from Wall Street and fluctuating commodity prices, several ASX stocks are trading significantly below their estimated intrinsic value based on future cash flows. This presents potential opportunities for investors. Notable undervalued stocks include Judo Capital Holdings (ASX:JDO), trading at a 43.5% discount with forecasted earnings growth of 23.7% annually, and Supply Network Limited (ASX:SNL), trading 21.4% below fair value with revenue growth expected at 10.8% per year. These companies stand out against the broader Australian market, which is expected to grow earnings at 12.1%. Investors are advised to consider these discrepancies amid ongoing geopolitical and sector-specific challenges impacting the market.