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Santos stock rebounds after profit miss; job cuts and dividend date sharpen focus
19 February 2026
2 mins read

Santos stock rebounds after profit miss; job cuts and dividend date sharpen focus

Sydney, Feb 19, 2026, 17:32 AEDT — The market has shut its doors for the day.

  • Santos Limited shares bounced back, climbing 5.6% to close at A$7.00 and breaking a one-day losing streak.
  • Investors are sizing up a planned 10% workforce reduction alongside a portfolio review signaled in the full-year results.
  • Feb. 23 marks the next key date for the stock—it goes ex-dividend then.

Santos Limited (STO.AX) surged 5.6% to close at A$7.00 on Thursday, topping a stronger day for local stocks as energy names pushed higher. Woodside Energy Group tacked on 4.5%, with Beach Energy up 2.7%. The S&P/ASX 200 settled roughly 0.9% higher.

This move lands right after Santos’ results-day slip, where attention quickly shifted to a profit miss and new cost-cutting efforts, overshadowing the dividend. Thursday’s bounce hints that investors are already weighing the implications: a slimmer cost structure and possible portfolio changes could reshape cash returns by 2026.

Santos faces a turning point on the operations front. Several major projects—longtime magnets for staff and capital—are close to shifting into regular business operations. That usually flips the script for equity investors: less focus on construction milestones, sharper eyes on how production holds up and what it costs.

Santos on Wednesday outlined plans to cut roughly 10% of its workforce and flagged a strategic review of its Australian integrated oil and gas portfolio for 2026. The company’s full-year underlying earnings dropped 25% to $898 million, falling short of the $904 million Visible Alpha analyst consensus. Revenue slipped 8% to $4.94 billion. Results took a hit as technical issues slowed the Barossa LNG project’s ramp-up. The board declared a final dividend of 10.3 cents per share. “The market is currently putting zero value on these assets,” said Dale Koenders, head of energy research at Barrenjoey, pointing to undeveloped resources. Chief Executive Kevin Gallagher, meanwhile, said growth projects like Barossa and Alaska’s Pikka Phase 1 would shift into the “base business.” Reuters

Traders aren’t likely to forget the cost-cutting headline anytime soon. Axing 10% of staff means hundreds of jobs on the line. How quickly and how sharply those cuts roll out—those details could land right in unit cost and free cash flow forecasts.

Dividends are drawing attention in the short term. Santos’ last payout is set to go ex-dividend on Feb. 23, with payment scheduled for March 25, dividend schedule data shows. (Anyone buying after the ex-dividend date won’t get that payout.)

Exactly what falls under the “strategic review” label remains uncertain, and it’s unclear just how far management plans to go. Break-ups and asset sales might release value, sure, but there’s execution risk in the mix—buyers could want discounts, or assets might have development or regulatory hurdles that complicate things.

Santos has pointed to its own operational risk here. The Barossa project has already hit a snag—a technical issue pushed back ramp-up. Any more delays would just prolong the squeeze on volumes and keep costs elevated, especially now, with investors looking for the company to move past construction and start delivering.

Investors are set to scrutinize any fresh information on how broad and when the portfolio review could be, especially as brokers may tweak their forecasts to account for job cuts and changes in project schedules.

Monday brings the Feb. 23 ex-dividend date, which stands out as the next obvious calendar cue and is expected to drive short-term flows. Traders are also watching for any fresh remarks on Barossa ramp-up, along with updates on the integration of major projects into Santos’ core operations.

Shan Ahmed Khan is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key developments influencing global financial markets and emerging industries.

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