Sydney, June 16, 2026, 09:05 AEST
- Ampol closed at A$33.80 on Monday, down 7.27%. The stock touched a session low of A$33.75.
- Brent crude lost almost 5% after chatter about a U.S.-Iran agreement cooled supply worries and sent prices lower.
- Ampol’s next key catalyst is wrapping up the EG Australia acquisition, which is due to close on June 30.
Ampol Limited (ALD:ASX) tumbled 7.27% on Monday, ending at A$33.80 after a previous close of A$36.45. The stock started at A$36.00 and hit an intraday low of A$33.75. Trading was brisk with 2.11 million shares moving hands, far above the average 897,000. The swing is notable for the fuel retailer, which was recently trading near its 52-week high. Google
Oil was hit the hardest. Crude prices fell sharply on talk of a possible U.S.-Iran agreement to keep the Strait of Hormuz open and extend a ceasefire, easing fears about major supply risks in the Middle East. Brent lost US$4.16, or 4.76%, to finish at US$83.17 a barrel. U.S. WTI settled down 4.87% at US$80.75. For Ampol, lower input costs over time can lift demand, but steep, fast declines in oil prices often weigh on energy shares anyway, as investors rework assumptions for refining, stockpiles, and near-term profit. Reuters
Ampol is relying more on refining and supply chain earnings. The Lytton Refiner Margin (LRM) rose to US$25.45 a barrel in the first quarter, up from US$6.07 a year earlier. Refining throughput climbed 10% to about 1.4 billion litres. The company said April was strong too, with Lytton and Trading and Shipping still boosting results. Oil prices have come off, but that hasn’t stopped the refinery’s momentum yet. Investors are now watching to see if profits can stay at these levels.
Optimism remains for bulls after Ampol got the green light from the ACCC for its EG Australia acquisition, so long as it unloads 41 retail fuel sites. The deal is slated to close by June 30. Ampol is holding to its forecast for about A$1.115 billion net cash out, and still targets annual synergies between A$65 million to A$80 million. CEO Matt Halliday called the buy “a major step in delivering Ampol’s strategy” and said it will bolster the retail network while providing more stable fuel and convenience income.
Ampol is not immune to swings in oil prices or refining margin volatility. The business also has to deal with fuel demand shifts, working capital swings, and the integration risk from EG Australia. The ACCC’s fix means Ampol won’t keep all the sites from the deal. Shares last traded at A$33.80, below the average 12-month target of A$38.94 on Google Finance. Six analysts rate the stock a buy. No hold or sell ratings right now, but keeping that upside depends on margins and how well EG is folded in. Google
Ampol shares look cheaper after Monday’s drop, but it’s not an obvious buy and risk is still there. The focus turns to the EG Australia deal, which is supposed to close by the end of June. After that, investors wait for the first-half Lytton Refinery results and the August 24 half-year numbers that include the dividend call. Those will show if the recent fall was tied to oil moves or means a deeper shift in refining and retail fuel outlooks.