Sydney, June 23, 2026, 05:07 (AEST)
- Santos closed at A$7.30 on Monday. Volume hit 11.24 million shares.
- Brent fell almost 4% as U.S.-Iran talks cooled worries over supply risk.
- Lagged LNG pricing could cushion the initial revenue drop, but Pikka means quicker exposure to current crude prices.
Santos (ASX:STO) finished Monday at A$7.30. Shares moved from A$7.26 to A$7.39 during the session. The stock’s lackluster end comes as an overnight drop in crude hasn’t yet shown up in the Sydney close for Australia’s second-biggest independent oil and gas name.
Brent slipped $3.11, or 3.86%, trading at $77.46 a barrel as of 1:57 p.m. EDT with U.S.-Iran talks making progress and the Strait of Hormuz staying open. Washington gave the green light for Iranian oil and product sales through August 21. UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo described those Iranian barrels as “additional supply for the market.” Reuters
Santos managed to close with a firmer finish than some of its oil peers. Woodside Energy slipped 0.9% to A$28.77 and Karoon Energy dropped 3.1% to A$1.40. The S&P/ASX 200 closed 0.14% lower at 8,816.1.
Santos shares held up without any new operating update. The most recent company news was on June 17, after it named Kate Vidgen as an independent director. For now, traders point to commodity positioning and hopes for fresh project cash flow as the stock’s main catalysts.
Santos’ LNG sales, which are tied to oil prices, don’t all move with daily Brent changes. The company’s quarterly reports follow three-month-lagged Japan Customs-cleared Crude, or JCC. This is the Japanese import-oil benchmark used in Asian LNG contracts. A drop in oil prices would take longer to show up in part of the LNG business, reaching earnings with a lag.
Pikka shifts the profile for Santos, making it less defensive. The Alaska field is on track to hit gross output of 80,000 barrels a day in the third quarter. Santos holds 51%, so about 40,800 barrels a day from that peak goes to the company. Initial sales revenue is also expected in the quarter. That means cash flow from those barrels should arrive faster at current oil prices than what the delayed LNG business brings in.
Craig Sidney, senior investment adviser at Shaw and Partners, said Pikka first oil was “a positive announcement” with oil prices strong and production up. The volume case is still there, but Brent under $78 cuts into margins compared to when first oil news hit in May. Reuters
Santos’ balance-sheet plan also ties in with the crude move. The company wants to cut net debt by about $2.5 billion by 2030 and trim annual interest costs by $150 million. “A disciplined reset from Santos and the right move,” said Mark Gardner, founder and chief executive of MPC Markets. If oil prices fall, the company’s reset leans harder on production and cost targets. Reuters
Santos sees Barossa LNG and Pikka pushing 2026 output up as much as 30%, setting guidance between 101 million and 111 million barrels of oil equivalent. That’s up from the 87.7 million it expects in 2025. CEO Kevin Gallagher has said the projects “expected to lift Santos’ production by around 25 to 30 per cent by 2027.” But the main question isn’t just about bigger volumes—the mix and timing of the cash they bring is the real issue. Reuters
But the risk to the downside is clearer now. If diplomacy holds and crude prices stay low, Pikka’s first shipments could land in a weaker market, so early cash from the project would be less and debt would come down slower. If the ramp to plateau slips, that would mean even more pressure. If talks fail or trouble returns near Hormuz, oil prices would jump again, but geopolitical risk would come back too.
Santos (ASX:STO) finished Monday at A$7.30, with the price not really showing a clear break from oil. Traders point to a lag in LNG pricing and Pikka revenues coming up soon. Meanwhile Brent is still on the move after the ASX close, so Tuesday’s open will be the first good look at how local trade catches up.