Fortescue share price rebounds after a rough Friday — what could move FMG next

Fortescue share price rebounds after a rough Friday — what could move FMG next

Sydney, February 2, 2026, 16:46 AEDT — The market has closed.

Fortescue Ltd (FMG.AX) shares finished Monday up 0.7%, closing at A$21.15 after fluctuating between A$20.62 and A$21.16 during a volatile session. The stock held up well against the broader market slump. BHP Group dropped 2.6%, Rio Tinto fell 1.0%, and the S&P/ASX 200 lost roughly 1%. (Investing.com Australia)

Australia ended on a mixed note after a steep slide in precious metals shook Asia’s markets and sparked chatter about margin calls — brokers demanding extra funds to back leveraged positions. “This looks … like a classic de-leveraging / liquidity squeeze,” said Marc Velan, head of investments at Lucerne Asset Management. (Reuters)

This is crucial for Fortescue, which moves almost like a straight play on bulk commodities and Chinese demand. When risk appetite drops, high-beta miners often take the initial hit, and their rebounds tend to be shaky.

The currency picture remains unsettled. The Australian dollar dropped to a one-week low of $0.6923 before finding some footing. Traders are now focused on Tuesday’s Reserve Bank decision, with most expecting a quarter-point rate hike. Joseph Capurso, head of foreign exchange at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, warned, “If the slump in precious and other metal prices continue, AUD/USD will be dragged lower.” (Reuters)

China’s private purchasing managers’ index, which tracks factory activity, nudged up to 50.3 in January from 50.1, according to the RatingDog gauge by S&P Global. Export orders helped lift the reading. Still, cost pressures linger. “If cost pressures persist while demand recovery is limited, profit margins will remain under pressure,” warned Yao Yu, founder of RatingDog. (Reuters)

For Fortescue investors, it’s a tug of war. Stronger export demand supports steel output, yet rising input costs and jittery risk sentiment quickly hit commodity prices — and miners’ stocks.

The risk is clear: forced selling could spread, or metal prices might slide overnight, pushing miners down sharply at the next open—even without any company news. On top of that, an unexpected move from the RBA could deliver a second blow, rattling currency and rate-sensitive sentiment.

Fortescue’s next major event is its FY26 half-year results, due Feb. 25. Market watchers will focus on updates to cost and production forecasts, and the dividend outlook, especially as investors grow less tolerant. (Investor Centre)

Investors will eye offshore commodity prices and the Australian dollar ahead of Tuesday’s open, watching closely for fallout from the wider metals sell-off. The RBA decision on Feb. 3 looms large, followed by Fortescue’s results on Feb. 25 as the next key milestones.

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