Sydney, April 27, 2026, 04:11 AEST
- On April 23, Brambles snapped up 236,576 ordinary shares for A$5.26 million. With this move, total shares repurchased in the current daily filing climb to 22.38 million.
- Shares of the ASX-listed pallet group slipped 1.08% to finish at A$22.02 on April 24.
- Brambles still has the buyback in play for capital management, though it’s also dealing with the lingering uncertainty of an outstanding shareholder class action.
Brambles Limited continued its on-market share buyback, disclosing the purchase of 236,576 shares on April 23 for a total of A$5.26 million. The Australian logistics company is moving ahead with its previously announced FY26 capital return plan, targeting up to US$400 million. Under an on-market buyback, Brambles acquires shares via the exchange, not through a fixed-price offer to shareholders.
This update lands at a time when Brambles is handing cash back to holders, with shares still under their recent peaks. Investors are juggling two things: reliable cash from the CHEP pallet business, and the unresolved hit from a Federal Court class-action ruling earlier this month. On April 24, the stock settled at A$22.02, having moved between A$21.70 and A$22.39 that day.
The buyback filing from Friday revealed the company picked up 22.14 million shares before the previous day, then added another 236,576 shares on the previous day, averaging about A$22.25 a share. Barrenjoey Markets Pty Ltd handled the brokerage, according to the document. The program’s slated to wrap up by June 30, 2026.
A cessation notice detailed that 236,576 shares are set to cease on April 27, following cancellation through the on-market buyback. The filing indicated Brambles’ quoted ordinary shares on issue will total around 1.349 billion after the cancellation.
Brambles’ buyback has been a key part of its capital approach. Back in February, the company confirmed it was on pace for the planned FY26 buyback of up to US$400 million. So far, it’s repurchased US$191 million worth of shares in the first half. Brambles also bumped up its free cash flow before dividends guidance, now targeting US$950 million to US$1.10 billion, up from the earlier US$850 million to US$950 million range. For constant- currency revenue growth, the company tightened its forecast to 3% to 4%.
Chief Executive Graham Chipchase described the first half as “resilient,” but warned of “ongoing demand headwinds” hitting major markets. According to Chipchase, softer consumer demand in the U.S., Latin America, and Europe, plus inventory optimisation efforts in Australia, have pushed down pallet orders from certain existing clients. Brambles Corporate Site
Brambles, which does most of its business under the CHEP brand, says its network covers roughly 60 countries and includes 348 million pallets, crates, and containers, along with over 750 service centres. North America and Europe make up its biggest markets.
The competitive landscape here is tight, but scale and asset control make the difference in pallet pooling—the business of renting pallets for reuse instead of one-off sales. According to industry research from Mordor Intelligence, major players in the pallet pooling and rental market include IFCO Systems, PECO Pallet, and China Merchants Loscam. They all go up against Brambles’ CHEP business on that list.
The legal picture remains murky. On April 13, Brambles announced the Federal Court had upheld certain claims related to its FY17 underlying profit guidance and some of its later sales revenue guidance, but threw out others, such as those linked to FY19 medium-term targets. Brambles told investors it’s still going through the more than 1,200-page decision, and said the financial fallout is still unclear.
Maurice Blackburn, working alongside Slater & Gordon, said Justice Murphy in the Federal Court ruled that Brambles failed to meet continuous disclosure rules from Nov. 16, 2016 through Jan. 23, 2017. Rebecca Gilsenan, who leads class actions at Maurice Blackburn, described the decision as an “important win for shareholders and for market integrity.” Maurice Blackburn
Corporate lawyers have their eyes on the verdict too. Chris Pagent, Andrew Lumsden, and Christian Owen from Corrs Chambers Westgarth noted that disclosure isn’t something you do once and move on; courts could scrutinize whether earnings guidance continues to rest on reasonable grounds as market conditions shift.
But the buyback isn’t a sure-fire boost for the stock. Brambles has flagged that actual purchases hinge on things like market conditions, where the share price sits, and broader capital-management priorities. The company can change course—dialing back, suspending, or even pulling the program if needed. There’s also the class-action damages process and any potential appeal to consider, both of which could alter its financial outlook before year-end.
Brambles’ next big set of numbers lands with its 2026 full-year results, due Aug. 20. Between now and then, investors will be watching the daily buyback disclosures, any movement on the class-action front, and signs that US and European consumer demand picks up enough to backstop that tighter revenue guidance.