BHP Share Price Holds Firm After New CEO Pick as China Risk Tests Copper Bet

March 18, 2026
BHP Share Price Holds Firm After New CEO Pick as China Risk Tests Copper Bet

MELBOURNE, March 19, 2026, 08:54 (AEDT)

BHP Group Ltd finished Wednesday’s session 0.72% higher at A$50.09. Investors got their first look at the miner’s biggest leadership shake-up in recent memory, as BHP tapped Brandon Craig—currently leading its Americas unit—to take over as chief executive from Mike Henry on July 1. 1

This shift is significant for BHP: copper made up 51% of operating earnings in the most recent half, topping iron ore for the first time. Prices got a boost as demand from AI data centers and clean-energy builds picked up. 2

The timing with China isn’t ideal. Craig described close relationships with both governments and customers as “really critical,” while Reuters noted that China Mineral Resources Group recently expanded its curbs on buying certain BHP iron ore products during this year’s supply negotiations. RBC Capital Markets’ Kaan Peker called the CEO handover “more evolutionary than transformational”. 3

Craig made it clear he isn’t looking to overhaul things right out of the gate. The new chief pointed to organic growth—building out BHP’s existing assets in copper, iron ore, potash, and coal—as the priority, adding that any deal on the M&A front would need to be “incredibly compelling”. Andy Forster at Argo Investments described Craig as “super impressive”. Over at Barrenjoey, analyst Glyn Lawcock noted that Henry hands over a robust copper portfolio spanning South Australia, Argentina, and Escondida in Chile. 4

The board framed the change as a nod to stability, not overhaul. Chair Ross McEwan pointed to Craig’s “discipline and focus” as qualities to drive BHP’s growth ambitions and unlock value, as the group confirmed Henry is set to exit after six and a half years leading the miner. 5

That still leaves the valuation debate open. According to LSEG data cited by Reuters Breakingviews, BHP shares are up 48% since Henry became CEO in 2020—less than the gains logged by Rio Tinto, Fortescue, and Glencore. The underperformance means Craig remains under the gun to show that capital restraint stacks up against the appeal of a major acquisition. 6

The risk hasn’t gone anywhere. Back in January, BHP disclosed it agreed to discount some iron ore shipments after negotiations with China’s state buyer and warned about a 20% jump in costs for its Jansen potash project in Canada. China, for its part, temporarily lifted a ban on Jimblebar fines for just a week—underscoring how unsettled the situation still is. 7

Investors aren’t making up their minds just yet. BHP closed at A$50.09 in Sydney; its New York ADRs slipped 3.1% to $68.30. The share moves offer a muddled verdict on whether sticking with continuity really delivers for a miner hoping copper muscle can drive a bigger multiple. 8

Technology News

  • Sole survivor sues Tesla over Piedmont Cybertruck crash that killed three
    March 18, 2026, 8:50 PM EDT. Jordan Miller, the sole survivor of the Thanksgiving-week Piedmont crash, has filed a lawsuit against Tesla alleging the Cybertruck's design contributed to the deaths of three friends. Miller, severely burned and with spinal injuries, says the truck's electronic door system failed and with no exterior handles, bystanders could not reach the occupants. The California Highway Patrol cited impairment, speed and alcohol as factors, but the suit argues the safety design was the cause. Miller's attorney, Anthony Label, said safer, feasible designs could have saved lives. Tesla did not respond to requests for comment. The suit could be consolidated with others filed by families of victims. The incident remains under investigation ahead of the anniversary of the crash that killed three college students.

Latest Articles

Northern Star Resources Ltd Stock Price Slips Below A$20 as Output Cut Sparks Fresh Doubts

Northern Star Resources Ltd Stock Price Slips Below A$20 as Output Cut Sparks Fresh Doubts

March 19, 2026
Northern Star Resources traded near A$19.60, down from A$20.95, after its second fiscal 2026 output cut in three months and broker target reductions. The miner cited weaker milling at Kalgoorlie and lower productivity at Jundee, lowering production guidance and raising cost forecasts. Shares remain well below their recent high despite gold prices near US$5,100 an ounce. Analysts cut earnings and price targets further.
CSL Limited Stock Price Drops as HEMGENIX Shortage Overshadows Fresh Buyback

CSL Limited Stock Price Drops as HEMGENIX Shortage Overshadows Fresh Buyback

March 19, 2026
CSL Ltd repurchased 74,167 shares for A$10.3 million on March 18, but shares closed down 2.23% at A$138.00 after warning of a temporary global shortage of its hemophilia B gene therapy HEMGENIX. The stock is now 49% below its 12-month high, following an 81% profit drop, major impairments, and the CEO’s abrupt exit last month.
Qantas Airways Limited Share Price Falls as Oil Spike and China Fuel Ban Raise Cost Fears

Qantas Airways Limited Share Price Falls as Oil Spike and China Fuel Ban Raise Cost Fears

March 19, 2026
Qantas Airways shares dropped 1.9% to A$8.56 in early Sydney trading after oil prices surged and China halted fuel exports. Brent crude climbed 5.6% to $107.38 a barrel following Iranian missile strikes, raising jet fuel costs. Qantas, over 80% hedged for crude, has already increased international fares. Air New Zealand and Cathay Pacific also reported pressure from rising fuel prices and limited hedging protection.