Vale stock rebounds in premarket after 4.5% drop as Brazil’s B3 reopens post-Carnival

Vale stock rebounds in premarket after 4.5% drop as Brazil’s B3 reopens post-Carnival

February 18, 2026

New York, Feb 18, 2026, 07:18 (EST) — Premarket

  • Vale’s U.S. shares picked up 1.3% in premarket trading, rebounding after a 4.5% loss the previous session.
  • Trading at Brazil’s B3 exchange picks back up later on Ash Wednesday, following the Carnival holiday closure.
  • For now, iron ore prices and Vale’s shareholder payout, set for early March, are grabbing the spotlight.

Vale S.A.’s U.S. shares bounced 1.3% to $16.10 before the bell Wednesday, clawing back some ground after Tuesday’s 4.5% slide to $15.90.

Brazilian investors will see the stock back in action Wednesday, as B3 reopens following its two-day Carnival break. Trading and registration resume at 1 p.m. local time (1300 GMT-3) on Ash Wednesday, per B3’s trading calendar.

The timing is key here: Vale typically serves as a bellwether for China’s steel appetite and bulk commodity moves, and its ADR traded even as São Paulo markets stayed closed. Iron ore hit a seven-month low this week—BHP mentioned it in its earnings, with the CEO pointing to “tough negotiations” on iron ore supply with China. Reuters

Investing.com data showed Vale’s common shares (VALE3) in Brazil ended Feb. 13 at 87.03 reais, slipping 2.47%.

Iron ore futures have barely budged from the key $100-a-ton mark lately, holding at $99.74 a tonne as of Feb. 17, according to Trading Economics.

Cash returns are up next for Vale. The company plans to deliver its second dividend instalment on March 4 in Brazil, while ADR holders are scheduled to start seeing payments from March 11. The payout also features “interest on equity” (JCP), a local shareholder distribution method that’s commonly paired with dividends in Brazil. Vale pointed out that the per-share figure could shift a bit, depending on shares sitting in treasury as part of its buyback. Vale

Vale swung to a $3.8 billion net loss in the fourth quarter, hit hard by a $3.5 billion write-down tied to its Canadian nickel business after the miner cut its outlook for future nickel prices. Stripping out that charge, adjusted EBITDA climbed 21%, reaching $4.6 billion.

Iron ore’s pace remains unpredictable. Analyst Bai Xin at Horizon Insights said, “We forecast global iron ore output to grow by 2.5% year-on-year in 2026,” and warned that increased exports to China could “pile pressure on prices this year.” Reuters

Risk appetite remains in play. Global stocks swung back and forth on Tuesday, with investors grappling with new concerns about artificial-intelligence spending and its potential to disrupt the economy—conditions that tend to sharpen moves in commodity-linked shares.

Vale shares jumped Tuesday, coinciding with U.S. markets reopening post-Presidents Day, a holiday that tends to bunch up positioning changes into one session.

Eyes will be on Vale’s local shares to see if they catch up when B3 reopens later Wednesday, after the ADR staged an early rebound. The next fixed event: Vale’s shareholder payout in early March.

Artur Ślesik

Artur Ślesik is a technology and financial markets journalist at Bez-kabli.pl, covering artificial intelligence, semiconductors, technology stocks and emerging innovations. A graduate of Warsaw University of Technology, he combines a technical background with market analysis to explain how new technologies are shaping industries, businesses and investment trends worldwide.

Stock Market Today

  • BHP Pilbara Strike Sees Fewer Workers Walk Out, Bargaining Talks Loom
    July 17, 2026, 10:28 PM EDT. This week's BHP strike in the Pilbara drew fewer stoppages than unions expected. Only 63 employees took part-far lower than the 200 figure put out by unions. Operations continued, with seven ships including the Iron Southern Cross loaded and sailing on time. Union leaders played down any real financial hit to BHP from the walkout, saying the strike was more about sending a message. The Chamber of Minerals and Energy of Western Australia said there's a clear rift between union leadership and workers. The dispute sets up more friction as enterprise bargaining agreement (EBA) talks approach.