Perth, June 22, 2026, 02:08 (AWST)
- Fortescue shares finished Friday at A$19.75, falling 1.1%. The stock is still trading under A$20 ahead of Monday.
- Iron ore benchmark prices hovered close to US$101 a tonne on June 18, slipping 8.3% in the past month.
- Fortescue is set to release its next production report on July 31.
Fortescue Ltd starts Monday on the back foot after dropping 1.1% to A$19.75 at Friday’s close. The ASX will trade as usual, and Fortescue’s grip on the high-A$19s could be shaky early on.
No results or trading update arrived over the weekend to change the story. Fortescue’s last posted ASX update was its May 25 board changes, so near-term pricing is tracking iron-ore markets, currency trades and any China talk.
Materials stocks were lower Friday, with the sector off around 3% in afternoon trade. BHP and Rio Tinto were down harder than Fortescue, after a stronger U.S. dollar pressured commodities.
China is where the pressure is playing out for the company. China Mineral Resources Group, the state buyer, told some steelmakers this month not to talk about Fortescue’s new Fortune Fines product during tough term-contract talks, Reuters reported. Metals and Operations CEO Dino Otranto called the talks an “arm wrestle.” First shipments of Fortune Fines are due in July. Reuters
Fortescue held its operating base steady, shipping 48.4 million tonnes in the March quarter. Nine-month shipments hit a record 148.7 million tonnes. Full-year guidance stays at 195 million to 205 million tonnes. Iron Bridge guidance dropped to 9 million to 10 million tonnes. Hematite C1 cost was US$18.29 per wet metric tonne for the quarter.
The near-term math is simple: it’s volume versus price. Fortescue says every US$10 swing in Brent crude shifts its hematite C1 cost by about 20 U.S. cents a tonne, so when fuel drops, costs fall. But if benchmark iron ore drops or discounts for Fortescue’s products get wider, those gains can go fast.
The long-term demand view isn’t as bad. India is aiming to lift steel output to 400 million tonnes by 2035-36, and more capacity is coming on in Southeast Asia. Rio Tinto’s Bold Baatar has flagged a “looming supply gap” of 650 million tonnes by 2035, but that doesn’t fill the gap left by weak Chinese demand this quarter. Reuters
Fortescue is using renewables as a hedge on costs, starting work on a 690-megawatt solar farm and a 650-megawatt-hour battery in the Pilbara. “The economics are improving every year,” Otranto said. He said electrification could help cut risk from fuel price swings. Global
But there’s downside too. July SGX iron-ore futures closed at US$98.80 a tonne on Friday, just off a one-month low. Shares could face more pressure if the price stays under US$100, if Chinese contract terms get stricter, or there’s another Iron Bridge issue. A deal with CMRG or stronger Chinese steel demand might spark a rapid bounce.
Fortescue doesn’t have results due this week, so the stock is expected to track iron ore and Chinese demand signals. The company’s green-iron plan could add earnings in the future, but only about US$20 billion has gone into green steel worldwide so far and planned 2030 capacity is still under 4% of forecast output. The commercial returns could be slower than the technology story implies.