Melbourne, June 16, 2026, 04:03 (AEST)
- BHP shares changed hands at A$65.18, gaining 3.58%. The stock hovered close to its 52-week high of A$65.44 and the company’s market cap stood at about A$331.2 billion. StockLight
- Copper’s move higher gave bulls some hope, trading near US$6.48/lb on June 15. Iron ore was steady, around US$101.62/t after a softer month. Trading Economics
- BHP’s next big event is its operational review set for July 16, with full-year earnings due August 18. BHP
BHP Group Ltd shares rose Monday, getting a lift as buyers pushed into Australian miners in a broad risk-on rally. The stock last traded at A$65.18, up 3.58%. Earlier, it hit A$65.44, matching its 52-week high. BHP is one of the biggest weights in the S&P/ASX 200, so moves in the stock can sway the index. The miner’s price-to-earnings ratio stood at 22.63, showing the market is already pricing in plenty. StockLight
S&P/ASX 200 hit a two-month high on June 15, boosted by stronger market sentiment, rising metals prices and buyers coming back to large resources stocks. No single company move drove the gains. Miners like BHP, Rio Tinto and Fortescue all closed up at least 2.7% that session, according to market coverage of the Australian sharemarket. News Copper was a factor for BHP. BHP’s earnings are now more tied to copper as the metal brings in a bigger slice of profit. Reuters said in February that copper and byproducts brought BHP US$7.95 billion in operating earnings for the first half, ahead of iron ore’s US$7.50 billion. Reuters
Copper prices remain close to their highs, and BHP’s April operational review backed up the bullish story. The company said output at Escondida and Antamina tracked toward the upper half of its FY26 copper guidance. CEO Mike Henry called out “record material mined and concentrator throughput at Escondida and record production at WAIO.” He also noted a “significant pipeline of copper and potash growth projects” set to continue as Brandon Craig takes over as CEO on July 1. BHP BHP is looking less like just an iron ore dividend stock—and more like a copper and long-life projects play for investors.
The bear story for iron ore is back in focus. Iron ore is still a key market, trading at US$101.62 a tonne on the latest Trading Economics data, down 8.68% over the month. Trading Economics There’s also an active labour dispute at Port Hedland, the top iron ore export port in Western Australia. BHP workers have voted for strike action, Reuters reported, with potential walkouts possible on five days’ notice. ABC News said up to 450 workers at Australia’s biggest bulk export port could take part. Reuters BHP shares tend to rise if commodity prices, volumes or dividends look set to go up. But shares take a hit when prices slide, inflation kicks in, production is at risk or China demand looks soft.
BHP is trading near its 52-week high, with a P/E above 22, making it look fully priced short term after the recent jump. Long-term buyers wanting copper exposure may still find it appealing, but it’s not as obvious a buy for new short-term positions now. The next event for the stock is the July 16 operational review for the year to June 30, when investors are watching for copper output, WA iron ore numbers, costs, and any signs Port Hedland tension is having an impact. BHP