Sydney, June 10, 2026, 08:02 AEST
Westgold Resources Ltd heads into Wednesday’s ASX session after dropping 4.5% on Tuesday to close at A$4.67, which was the last price before regular trading restarted in Sydney. The ASX’s normal trading window is from 09:59:45 to 16:00 local time.
Australian stocks fell Tuesday after the Monday market holiday, with the S&P/ASX 200 dropping 0.2% to 8,604.2. Gold stocks lost 4%. Evolution Mining ended down 3.7%. Northern Star Resources slipped 3.3%. Westgold’s drop matched a wider move in local gold shares.
Spot gold dropped 1.5% to US$4,264.70 an ounce, hitting its lowest since March 23, as investors braced for U.S. inflation numbers and rate-hike fears came back. “All markets across the board went into risk-off,” Bob Haberkorn, RJO Futures senior market strategist, told Reuters. Reuters That is why the move matters now.
Westgold says it is unhedged, so it’s exposed to moves in the gold price. Without hedging, the company hasn’t set future sales prices and tracks spot bullion more closely. In its March-quarter update, Westgold called itself an ASX 100 Australian gold producer. It runs four mining hubs in the Murchison and Southern Goldfields of Western Australia.
No new operating news hit the market. Westgold’s investor centre showed the most recent ASX filing was a daily buy-back notice dated June 5, following the same pattern as other updates from earlier this week.
Westgold’s on-market buy-back is still open, according to a June 5 filing. The company purchased 182,258 shares on June 4, paying A$930,603.50. There are 43.69 million shares left on the buy-back mandate.
Investors still have numbers to go on from the balance sheet. Westgold said March-quarter gold production came in at 93,145 ounces. Underlying cash rose by A$285 million. The company finished March with A$856 million across cash, bullion and liquid investments. Westgold reported no debt at March 31. The all-in sustaining cost, not including ore-purchase deals, was A$2,931 per ounce.
Managing Director and CEO Wayne Bramwell said in the quarterly report that cash generation had pushed treasury up to A$856 million, allowing the company to “internally fund growth and return capital to shareholders.” He added that full-year costs looked set to hit the upper end of guidance.
But there’s an obvious risk here. If U.S. inflation numbers stoke more rate-hike worries, gold could stay weak and Westgold’s unhedged stance would cut in both directions. The company still needs to use its cash pile to boost output and watch that costs don’t take too much from the gold-price margin.
Right now it’s the tape doing the talking. Gold prices are softer, ASX gold names have taken on more selling, and Westgold shares are back down, testing if buybacks and cash reserves can balance out the tougher commodity scene.