Weir Group Shares Extend Rebound as Mining-Tech Stock Tries to Recover From 2026 Slide

Weir Group Shares Extend Rebound as Mining-Tech Stock Tries to Recover From 2026 Slide

June 16, 2026

London, June 16, 2026, 12:04 BST.

  • Weir Group was trading at 2,456p at 12:02 p.m. BST, up 0.49%, after jumping 5.16% on Monday while the FTSE 100 slipped. Google
  • The stock is still about 31% below its 52-week high of 3,580p, leaving investors focused on whether recent order growth can turn into stronger first-half numbers. Google
  • The next big scheduled catalyst is Weir’s 2026 half-year results on July 29. Weir Group

Weir Group PLC edged higher again on Tuesday, extending a sharp rebound from the previous session as investors moved back into the FTSE 100 mining-technology stock. Google Finance showed Weir at 2,456p at 12:02 p.m. BST, up 12p on the day, with the shares having traded between 2,446p and 2,488p. The move followed Monday’s 5.16% rise to £24.44, a gain that stood out because the wider FTSE 100 fell 0.39% that day. Google

There was no fresh earnings announcement behind the move, so the rise looks more like a sentiment repair trade after a weak spell. Weir remains far below its February 52-week high of 3,580p, which means the market is still discounting execution risk. The stock’s near-term case rests on whether demand from miners turns into orders, revenue and cash flow. In its latest trading update, Weir said first-quarter group orders rose 4% on a constant-currency basis, meaning exchange-rate moves are stripped out, and its book-to-bill ratio reached 1.14. Book-to-bill measures orders received against sales billed; a figure above 1 usually points to a growing order book. Investegate

The bull case is that Weir is exposed to long-term mining investment in copper, gold and other critical minerals, while its aftermarket business — replacement parts and service after equipment is installed — gives it recurring demand. The company also said ESCO original equipment orders rose 49%, helped by demand for engineered mining attachments, and CEO Jon Stanton said supportive commodity prices were driving expansion demand, adding that Weir expected orders to develop “very positively through the year.” Investegate

The bear case is not trivial. Reuters reported after the April update that first-quarter organic order intake fell 3%, with shares down as much as 10% that day, as investors weighed order phasing, mine disruptions in Asia-Pacific and Africa, and the planned CEO handover. Andrew Neilson is due to replace Stanton as CEO on August 1, so the July half-year results will also be read as a transition test. Reuters

Valuation keeps the stock from looking obviously cheap even after the pullback. Google Finance listed Weir on a price-to-earnings ratio of 25.83, meaning investors are paying nearly 26 times recent earnings per share, with a dividend yield of 1.70%. Analyst screens remain supportive, with 8 buy ratings and 3 holds shown by Google Finance, but the shares now need proof that first-quarter order visibility is converting into profit and cash. On today’s verified data, Weir looks more like a selective recovery candidate than a low-risk bargain: attractive for investors who believe mining capex and aftermarket demand will strengthen, but still risky until the July 29 half-year update confirms the trajectory. Google

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