Sydney, Feb 16, 2026, 18:06 AEDT — After-hours
- Telstra ended Monday 0.2% higher, finishing the session at A$4.95.
- Telstra’s half-year results land Feb. 19, and investors are bracing for the numbers.
- ASX 200 finished the session 0.22% higher.
Telstra Group Ltd (TLS.AX) edged 0.2% higher to finish at A$4.95 on Monday. The session saw the shares move in a range from A$4.92 to A$4.99, leaving the stock some way off its 52-week high of A$5.14. 1
Not a big shift, but the window’s narrow. Telstra flagged Feb. 19, a Thursday, for its FY26 half-year webcast, slotting in the popular dividend name as Australia’s earnings deluge heats up. 2
Dividend dates line up right behind. Telstra shares go ex-dividend on Feb. 25, so anyone buying from that point misses out on the payout. The record date is Feb. 26; payment’s scheduled for March 27. 3
The S&P/ASX 200 edged up 19.5 points, or 0.22%, lifted by a strong rally in tech stocks. Communication services also ended the day in positive territory, according to Market Index. 4
Telstra holders this week aren’t just watching for one big number. The focus is on cash generation, how costs are tracking, and signs that management still stands by its outlook.
The mobile segment’s numbers are on deck too. ARPU — that’s average revenue per user — and churn rates usually get close attention, since both offer clues on whether firms can hold the line on pricing in a space where sudden discount wars aren’t rare.
Enterprise remains a trouble spot. Investors want specifics—execution, not just talk. They’re watching for evidence that service delivery and simplification projects actually show up in the numbers, not just in presentations.
Competition isn’t going anywhere. TPG Telecom keeps squeezing on price and bundles, joined by smaller broadband outfits doing the same. For Telstra, holding onto that premium spot hinges on keeping network investment and service quality visibly ahead of the pack.
There’s a bear scenario here. If management signals caution on expenses or customer behavior, it can sting a stock sitting close to its 12-month highs. Add rising bond yields to the mix, and dividend-focused shares can suddenly fall out of favor.