Sydney, February 16, 2026, 16:59 AEDT — Market closed.
- BHP slipped 1.5% as investors pared back holdings before Tuesday’s half-year results.
- Iron ore futures slipped heading into the Lunar New Year break, as mills pulled back on production.
- Miners slipped, trailing the broader Australian market, which ended the day in positive territory.
BHP Group Ltd closed at A$50.36 on Monday, slipping 1.51% as investors braced for the mining giant’s half-year results set for Tuesday. (Bhp)
Timing’s a factor here. With China’s main markets closed for Lunar New Year, Asian liquidity has dried up, and bulk commodity prices have been swinging. (Reuters)
BHP’s shares usually react most to two things: the interim dividend and whatever clues management drops about costs or capital spending—that’s where the focus lands again.
Iron ore futures slipped on Friday, with traders trimming bets ahead of the holiday and key steelmaking signals losing steam. “Hot metal production has continued to pull back, as operators hot bank or idle their furnaces ahead of the holiday,” Atilla Widnell, managing director at Navigate Commodities, said. Hot banking refers to mills operating their blast furnaces at reduced rates instead of shutting them down completely. (Business Recorder)
The data also flagged a potential drop in Australian shipments with tropical cyclone Mitchell brewing off the Pilbara coast. On the demand side, a slowdown looms as steel mills wind down for maintenance. (Business Recorder)
BHP slid alongside other major miners. Fortescue Metals tumbled 4.7%, Rio Tinto gave up 4.1%. Despite the hit to heavyweights, the ASX 200 still edged up 0.22%. (Investing.com Australia)
Investors are contending with a messy batch of signals—supply news that can squeeze the market in a hurry, while demand jitters flare up just as fast whenever Chinese mills retreat.
BHP’s already pointed to strong operations for the half-year, but Tuesday’s results will show if that actually bolstered margins, once final prices and costs are factored in.
If management signals stable demand in markets beyond China or suggests copper prices are holding up, that might be enough to draw buyers back on a clean set of numbers and a steady guidance. On the other hand, a softer dividend, any signs of rising costs, or a more cautious approach to capital spending could easily push investors the other way.
Macro factors pose another threat. Steel demand failing to recover after the holiday—or iron ore prices staying weak—can drag miners lower, even if they’re meeting production goals.
BHP’s half-year numbers drop February 17, around 8:00 a.m. in Melbourne. The period covers the six months through December 31. (Bhp)