Sydney, June 16, 2026, 09:02 (AEST)
- QBE Insurance Group finished the day at A$23.45, down A$0.61, or 2.54%. Shares remain ahead 19.04% in 2026. Intelligent Investor
- Shares slipped after getting near this year’s A$24.60 high. Some profit-taking probably weighed. Intelligent Investor
- QBE drops half-year numbers and dividend info on August 14, putting that release at the top of the calendar. QBE DEV
QBE Insurance Group Limited dropped 2.54% to A$23.45 in the latest ASX trade. That was against a broader gain for financials, with the ASX 200 financials up 1.2% early Monday, according to Market Index. Shares in QBE are still higher for the week and this year. Lower yields, softer oil, and some risk appetite pushed other financials up. Intelligent Investor
QBE shares gave back some gains after their recent rally, but the market hasn’t seen any new earnings warning. The stock is still trading close to its 2026 high. Valuation is tighter now, with QBE sitting at A$23.45 on Google Finance, while analysts’ 12-month target sits at A$24.41. That leaves about 4.09% potential upside, based on the average. QBE has a price-to-earnings ratio of 11.81. The P/E ratio gives a quick look at how the share price compares with its earnings per share. Google
QBE’s latest full-year results still give bulls something to lean on. Statutory net profit after tax landed at US$2.157 billion, while adjusted net profit after tax was US$2.132 billion. Gross written premium rose 7%. The group’s combined operating ratio was 91.9%. Gross written premium totals up all policy value before any deductions. The combined ratio, which measures claims and underwriting expenses as a share of premium income, points to underwriting profit when it stays below 100%. ASX Announcements
QBE’s insurance profit can swing hard if weather hits, big claims land, prices slip or inflation rises. In its 1Q26 update, QBE showed about US$300 million in catastrophe costs so far for April, against its US$517 million first-half allowance. The company kept FY26 guidance unchanged, still forecasting mid-single-digit constant-currency premium growth and a combined operating ratio near 92.5%. Next time, the focus stays on premium growth, catastrophe costs, and whether underwriting margins hold.
QBE is looking fairly valued and a bit exposed to risk at these levels—shares aren’t cheap. The insurer has put up solid profit numbers, with returns and investment income backing that up, but the stock has already run in 2026 and trades near the average broker target now. Focus shifts to the August half-year result to see if there’s room to run, or if QBE stays open to profit-taking and disappointment if catastrophe claims or premium growth miss. Google