Rio Tinto (LON:RIO) steadies in London while lower-grade iron ore rivals take hit

Rio Tinto slips as iron ore premium faces test ahead of July update

July 8, 2026

Shares in Rio Tinto fell on July 8 as traders watched for signs on the iron ore premium, ahead of the company’s monthly output update due later in July. LONDON, July 8, 2026, 16:08 BST

  • Rio Tinto plc last showed a drop of 3.84% at 6,566/6,567p on London’s delayed tape, steeper than the FTSE 100 Index (INDEXFTSE:UKX), which slipped about 1.3%.
  • The stock is down about 28% from its 52-week high set on May 27, after dropping 3% Tuesday and sliding again Wednesday.
  • Copper, iron ore, and lithium all slipped on the most recent commodity data. Brent crude surged 5%, but that looks like cost and rate pressure, not a lift for Rio’s top line.

Rio Tinto’s drop isn’t just a single-session move tied to Middle East action. It looks more like the market dialing back its 2026 delivery premium. As of 16:08 BST, London was still in regular trading (0800-1630 BST), so this was risk being priced live late in the day. The Rio number here comes from delayed data, not the closing print.

Technical signals are turning worse. Hargreaves Lansdown said Rio moved 2.65 million shares, while MarketWatch said the stock dropped 3% to £68.25 on Tuesday on just 1.7 million shares, less than the 50-day average of 2.6 million. The market saw a light-volume drop first, then more sellers joined in. That’s the pattern traders are watching.

SignalLatest verified readMarket message for Rio
Rio Tinto 6,566/6,567p, off 3.84%; 2.65 mln shares traded Pressure from Rio’s own news, not just the wider index
FTSE 100 (INDEXFTSE:UKX)Down about 1.3% so far Broad risk-off move, but Rio dropped more
Copper$6.04/lb, down 2.16% July 8 Hurts the growth pitch for Rio
Iron ore$98.02/t July 7, lower on the day Pilbara cash flow stays a risk
Brent crude$77.97/bbl, up 5.14% at 1339 GMT Fuel, freight, cost inflation risk goes up

The table points out that the index doesn’t tell the whole story. Rio dropped about three times more than the FTSE in the last check, as oil jumped enough to pressure mining margins and rates bets. SEB Research’s Ole Hvalbye told Reuters, “Fundamentally, oil should trade higher.” MST Marquee’s Saul Kavonic said Trump’s comments upped the “prospect of a re-closing of the Strait.” Reuters

Rio’s next key update is the July 15 Q2 operations review, then half-year results drop July 29. So Wednesday’s slide looks like a move to cut risk before those events. Investors are not betting on any sudden change. They are pricing in the risk that any boost in output won’t be enough if spot prices stay weak and costs stay high.

Rio 2026 operating lineQ1 2026 result2026 guide kept by companyWhat July 15 needs to prove
Pilbara iron ore shipments72.4 mln tonnes, up 2% YoY323-338 mln tonnesRecovery underway in cyclone-affected output
Global iron ore production82.8 mln tonnes, up 12% YoY343-366 mln tonnesProduction is being converted to sales, not just adding to stock
Mined copper229,000 tonnes, up 9% YoY800,000-870,000 tonnesOyu Tolgoi is helping grow copper share
Lithium carbonate equivalent12,700 tonnes61,000-64,000 tonnesArcadium output is rising, capex is still in check

Rio Tinto’s April ops review leaves bulls with some cover. CEO Simon Trott said, “Operating excellence drove 9% YoY copper equivalent production growth.” Full-year guidance stayed steady for iron ore, copper, and lithium. The bigger worry now is whether that growth can hold up earnings if iron ore keeps hovering near $100 and copper cools off ahead of the July 15 update. Rio Tinto

Earlier this year, the stock looked stronger on operations. In January, Rio said 2025 copper-equivalent production would grow 8%, copper alone up 11%, and fourth-quarter Pilbara shipments were higher. Now, Wednesday’s trading shows the market isn’t rewarding output by itself. Investors are waiting for delivered tonnes, tighter price moves, and signs costs are in check.

China stands out as the other main factor behind the selloff, making the move tough to call just chart noise. Reuters said the country’s state iron ore buyer told mills not to accept some of Fortescue Ltd ’s lower-grade portside ore starting July 15. BHP Group Ltd and Rio shares also dropped on the same headlines. Breakingviews put China’s share of seaborne iron ore buys at around 70% and said CMRG, the new buyer group, was created to combine purchases. Rio isn’t Fortescue, but Pilbara profits still hinge on China steel demand and the benchmark price.

Copper and lithium add some support, but they’re not enough yet to offset a weaker iron ore multiple when the tape is soft. Rio’s head of lithium, Jérôme Pécresse, told Reuters, “We want to show that we can build on time and on budget,” with a goal for 200,000 tonnes lithium capacity by 2028. That 2028 target is still a ways off. For now, July’s stock depends on Pilbara, copper prices and whether lithium output can ramp without extra capital needs. Reuters

Valuation alone isn’t bailing out the stock. Hargreaves Lansdown shows Rio carrying a 4.58% dividend yield and trading at 13.61 times earnings on the delayed quote. That only looks cheap if the July 15 update holds the 323-338 million tonne Pilbara shipment target and copper isn’t slipping. Otherwise, the yield may just be covering weaker iron ore cash flows instead of supporting the price.

Investors have seen the trade tighten up. If Q2 shipments catch up cleanly, the stock could steady around 6,500p. But if numbers disappoint again, focus may swing from “large miner with a 4.6% yield” to “iron ore cash flow under buyer pressure” ahead of July 29 earnings.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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