Sydney, Feb 2, 2026, 16:46 AEDT — Market closed
- BHP slips 2.3% to A$49.42 as the ASX 200 wraps up roughly 1% lower
- Miners fall behind amid margin-driven selling that spreads across commodities-linked trades
- BHP announces its largest Xplor intake yet; half-year results set for Feb. 17
BHP Group Ltd shares dropped 2.3% to A$49.42 at Monday’s close in Sydney, weighed down as resource stocks took a hit amid renewed selling in commodity-linked markets. (Investing)
The move stood out as traders continued to unwind leverage following a sharp shock in precious metals that rippled through broader markets. “Margin calls” — demands for additional cash to maintain leveraged positions — often push investors to offload the most liquid stocks first, which tend to be major miners. Marc Velan, head of investments at Lucerne Asset Management, called the action a “classic de-leveraging / liquidity squeeze.” (Reuters)
The S&P/ASX 200 slipped about 1% to close at 8,779, weighed down by miners and gold stocks. BHP dropped 2.3%, Rio Tinto fell 1.0%, but Fortescue went against the grain, rising 0.9%, ABC reported. Local investors were also eyeing the Reserve Bank of Australia’s policy decision set for Tuesday. Meanwhile, iron ore last traded down 0.9% at $US103.90 a tonne. (ABC News)
Off the price swings, BHP picked 10 early-stage exploration and tech firms for its 2026 Xplor accelerator — the biggest group since the program started. “Exploration is evolving quickly,” said group exploration officer Tim O’Connor. BHP announced equity-free grants of $US500,000 each, aiming to link geology, data, and new tools. Marley Palin, head of BHP Xplor, described the 2026 intake as showing just how “broad and dynamic” early-stage discovery has become. (BHP)
The program may be modest in dollar terms compared to BHP’s main operations, but it reflects the company’s strategic focus: rooted in bulk commodities while extending its reach into “future-facing” metals like copper.
Regarding ASX disclosures, traders found little fresh information. The exchange’s announcements page recorded no BHP updates from Jan. 27 through Feb. 2. (Australian Securities Exchange)
That pushed the stock to behave more like a macro play than a company-specific tale — reflecting shifts in commodity swings, concerns about demand from China, and overall risk appetite, not just a response to a filing.
But it works both ways. If forced selling drags on or metals remain volatile, miners could stay under pressure even without any fresh company-specific setbacks. On the flip side, a quick return of liquidity might ease that flow-driven strain just as swiftly.
BHP’s next big date is its half-year results on Feb. 17. Investors will zero in on costs, output levels, and how the company views demand for iron ore and copper heading into the next quarter. (BHP)