Sydney, February 27, 2026, 17:42 AEDT — After-hours
- West African Resources fell by the end of Sydney trading this week.
- State Street bumped up its declared voting stake in WAF, according to a fresh substantial holder notice.
- Investors are eyeing any move from Burkina Faso to boost its Kiaka stake, as well as waiting on the company’s upcoming report.
West African Resources Ltd (WAF.AX) slipped 1.13% on Friday, ending the session at A$3.49 after closing at A$3.53 the day before, MarketScreener data show. Even with Friday’s dip, shares remain roughly 20% higher year-to-date.
State Street Corporation and its subsidiaries bumped up their stake in the gold miner to 8.55%, up from 6.17%, according to a substantial holder notice lodged late Wednesday. Their voting power now stands at 97,694,034 votes, an increase from the previous 70,467,209, the filing showed.
The share register change comes as investors watch developments in Burkina Faso and the Kiaka project. Earlier this week, West African pointed to government minutes mentioning a draft decree—one that could let the state pick up another 25% paid equity stake in Kiaka SA. The company said it’s still in talks with the government, aiming for terms “that respect” both shareholders and lenders. WeLink
Executive chairman and CEO Richard Hyde said in the statement that “Operations at Sanbrado and Kiaka have continued unaffected.”
Under Australia’s “substantial holder” rules, investors must report once their voting power tops 5%, and again if it shifts by at least 1 percentage point. Traders pore over those filings, watching for signs of where big money is moving and which institutions are building stakes.
For State Street, the notice detailed a blend of investment-management stakes and securities-lending positions tied up with collateral setups. The headline percentage change, then, can come off as simpler than what’s actually going on beneath the surface.
February’s seen WAF pop up frequently on the ASX announcements feed, thanks to a string of substantial holder filings and other related notices coming through just as the Kiaka update landed.
West African runs the Sanbrado mine along with the Toega satellite pit in Burkina Faso. The Kiaka project, now under development, is at the heart of the ownership discussions the company highlighted this week.
Register shifts aren’t always clear-cut. Securities lending and collateral transfers may bump up or trim a holder’s reported “relevant interest,” but that doesn’t necessarily point to a clean, on-market purchase — and with the Kiaka talks underway, there’s fresh uncertainty over how changes to state participation could ripple through funding terms and shareholder economics.
The ASX stays shut until Monday, so eyes shift to upcoming filings. MarketIndex lists an annual report slated for March 5, with a quarterly update set for April 16.
A formal word on Kiaka’s equity structure, or perhaps a new release dropped with the March 5 report, could be what steers West African Resources’ share price from here.