Sydney, June 16, 2026, 07:06 AEST
- Computershare ended Monday at A$36.00, dropping 2.31%. The ASX 200 gained 1.3% to finish at 8,914.
- The company’s most recent ASX filing holds Management EPS for FY26 around 144 cents. Margin income hasn’t changed, staying close to US$740 million.
- Traders are waiting for the RBA call Tuesday. Computershare’s full-year numbers come out August 12.
Computershare Limited (ASX: CPU) dropped 2.31% to A$36.00 on Monday, slipping A$0.85 as nearly 3.20 million shares traded. Pressure from sellers left the stock weaker while the S&P/ASX 200 rose 1.3% to 8,914, helped by gains in miners, gold, and travel after the US-Iran ceasefire pulled oil prices down. Computershare didn’t release any new price-sensitive announcements Monday. Its last major update was the May 5 guidance. Google
Computershare shares have already bounced a lot since the March lows, which didn’t leave much space for a miss. Stocks tend to climb on better cash flow or if investors pay higher multiples, but often fall if any optimism already looks baked in or the setup isn’t as attractive. Here, the trade looks aimed at valuation on CPU. Google Finance shows a P/E of 24.70. Analysts’ 12-month average target sits at A$35.19, almost the same as Monday’s close. Google
Computershare stuck to its FY26 Management EPS goal at about 144 cents, around 6% up on last year, and lifted margin income guidance to about US$740 million. Margin income still comes down to client cash balances and rates, so both moving parts matter. Employee Share Plan fee revenue climbed again from repeat clients, while Corporate Trust fee revenue and issuance volumes also rose. Client balances headed up in the second half. Computershare
Bears say a lot of Computershare’s strength may already be in the price. The company’s first-half margin income fell 5.4% to US$372.9 million in February, mainly because of lower US cash rates. Hedging and bigger balances helped but didn’t fully offset it. The stock often tracks overall equity-market activity. Fewer IPOs, corporate actions, trades, or lower employee share plan demand can hit the shares. CEO Stuart Irving told investors in February, “We are executing well on our strategic plans,” but investors are waiting for stronger second-half momentum to support the current multiple.
RBA policy call is up next, with the decision due at 2:30 p.m. AEST, June 16. The central bank keeps the cash rate at 4.35% and plans to put out a statement Tuesday. Computershare is in focus, as its client-cash yields shift with global rates and valuations on financial stocks stay high. But the company’s main catalyst is its full-year results on August 12. Investors want to see Computershare hit the 144-cent EPS goal, reach US$740 million in margin income, and give outlook for FY27. Reserve Bank of Australia
Computershare is trading around fair value but doesn’t look cheap based on current numbers. The global registry and corporate trust business brings in steady revenue and the balance sheet looks solid. Management lifted their FY26 margin-income guidance, but shares are near A$36, above the latest analyst average targets. Pressure could come from weaker FY27 outlook, smaller client balances, softer corporate activity or a move in rates.