Sydney, June 9, 2026, 05:04 (AEST)
Fortescue Ltd (FMG) faces the ASX open Tuesday weaker, with shares last changing hands at A$20.53. The stock dropped 2.33% on Friday, bringing its loss over the past week to 7.98%. FMG was not traded Monday, with the Australian Securities Exchange shut for the King’s Birthday holiday.
This matters as Tuesday’s open is the first real window for local investors to react to both a weaker iron ore market and new worries about Fortescue’s China sales talks.
S&P/ASX 200 closed down 0.70% at 8,625.10 Friday, hit by losses in miners and banks. BHP slid 2.48%, Rio Tinto lost 1.86% and Fortescue was off 2.33%. FMG’s drop tracked the broader iron ore names selling off.
Iron ore last traded near US$102 a tonne on June 5, according to Trading Economics. The price slid 7.99% over the past month. Iron ore futures, which let traders lock in or speculate on prices, remain the key price indicator for FMG since iron ore still makes up most of its revenue.
China is also in focus. On June 2, Reuters said state iron ore buyer China Mineral Resources Group told some steel producers not to discuss Fortescue’s Fortune Fines, a new lower-grade product, as the companies struggle to agree on a term supply contract. Fortescue Metals CEO Dino Otranto described the negotiation as an “arm wrestle,” according to Reuters. Reuters
Fortescue’s shares have a strong operating base behind the move. The miner shipped 48.4 million tonnes of iron ore in the March quarter and hit a record 148.7 million tonnes in the first nine months. It left its FY26 shipment guidance steady at 195 million to 205 million tonnes. Otranto called it a “solid quarter.” MarketScreener
Even so, traders focus on the commodity itself, not only volume. With iron ore prices down, miners take a revenue hit. Fortescue’s shares usually react more than diversified peers when investors have doubts on Chinese steel demand.
Fortescue’s earnings should stay tied to iron ore going forward, Morningstar analyst Jon Mills said in a January note. Mills pointed out that margins at Fortescue trail BHP and Rio Tinto, since Fortescue gets less for its lower-grade ore compared to the 62% benchmark price used in the sector.
It’s not all one-way for FMG. If Chinese steel demand picks up, CMRG softens its stance, or buyers see Fortune Fines moving without steep discounts, pressure on FMG could lift. The risk is still there—iron ore dropping again toward US$100 a tonne with China holding firm would push investors’ limits ahead of the next FMG update.
No Fortescue results are scheduled this week. The miner’s investor calendar puts its June quarter production report on July 31, and full-year results on August 24. So traders are watching iron ore screens, moves in BHP and Rio Tinto, and anything new from Chinese buyers.
FMG opens Tuesday at around A$20.50, after a rough week. The iron ore price and China talks are still the main drivers.