Fortescue share price slips again: Jefferies cuts target as iron ore stays under pressure
17 February 2026
1 min read

Fortescue share price slips again: Jefferies cuts target as iron ore stays under pressure

Sydney, Feb 17, 2026, 16:59 AEDT — Trading after the bell.

Fortescue Ltd shares slipped again Tuesday, building on Monday’s steep decline, as investors digested softer iron ore prices and a newly lowered broker target.

The stock settled at A$20.10, down 0.5% for the day. That follows a roughly 4.7% slide on Monday. (Investing.com)

Fortescue’s drop stands out, given its heavy reliance on iron ore — and prices for the metal have now dipped under US$100 a tonne. That’s putting strain on the broader materials sector, even as earnings season headlines shore up other corners of the market. (Market Index)

BHP jumped on Tuesday, boosted by a stronger-than-anticipated half-year profit and a beefed-up interim dividend, despite the miner warning about weaker iron ore prices. “They smashed everyone’s expectations from a dividend perspective,” said Andy Forster, portfolio manager at Argo Investments. (Reuters)

Jefferies’ Mitch Ryan lowered his price target for Fortescue, dropping it to A$17.20 from A$18.40, while sticking with an Underperform rating. The downward move follows adjustments to the bank’s longer-term commodity forecasts. (TipRanks)

Trading volumes were light in several Asian markets this day—exchanges in China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, and South Korea all closed for Lunar New Year. That left the region quiet, muting cues that usually drive bulk commodity sentiment. (Reuters)

Fortescue has been touting its “Real Zero” decarbonisation plan to both investors and customers, shifting the focus off prices. “Real Zero is about… not offsetting emissions but eliminating them,” said Metals and Operations chief executive Dino Otranto. The company just rolled out two battery-electric locomotives on its Pilbara rail network. (ESG News)

Iron ore is still the key swing factor for the stock. Most traders view Fortescue as a proxy for China’s steel margins and construction appetite, often overwhelming whatever company-specific news is in the mix on any given day.

Still, it’s a two-way street. A rebound in iron ore prices — or a fresh policy push from China that boosts steel demand — could flip sentiment fast. On the flip side, if the commodity drops further, investors zero in on costs and the risk to dividends.

Fortescue’s FY26 half-year numbers are due Feb. 25. Investors have their eyes on shipment volumes, cost updates, and capex guidance—plus any clues about dividends. (investors.fortescue.com)

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