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Ramelius Resources share price: buyback update, director sale and UBS call set the next trade
24 February 2026
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Ramelius Resources share price: buyback update, director sale and UBS call set the next trade

Sydney, February 24, 2026, 18:33 AEDT — Market closed

  • Ramelius Resources closed at A$4.87 after a 0.2% dip, the stock riding through some sharp intraday moves.
  • The miner’s latest repurchase filing shows 1.24 million shares bought back, with about A$5.56 million spent.
  • Traders are watching buybacks, upcoming mining milestones, and when the March dividend will hit.

Ramelius Resources Limited closed Tuesday barely changed, with investors digesting an on-market share buyback update and news of a director selling shares. The stock ended at A$4.87, down a single cent from its previous finish. It kicked off the session at A$5.08.

The buyback is grabbing attention—management can pull the trigger fast if cash builds and trading gets choppy. In gold mining, moods turn sharply with bullion swings and shifting risk appetite. Repurchasing soaks up shares when prices sag.

It’s a busy stretch for Australian resources names, as investors juggle the prospect of cash payouts against growth spending. Ramelius is offering up dividends and buybacks, while also signaling it’s ready to invest in expansion. The market still has to decide what wins out if costs climb or gold prices slip.

In an ASX Appendix 3C lodged Feb. 23, Ramelius said it bought back 1,235,503 shares on Feb. 20, spending about A$5.56 million, with shares trading between A$4.43 and A$4.60. That leaves 72,569,626 shares available under the buyback program, which originally allowed for up to 73,964,497 shares.

Non-executive director Fiona Jane Murdoch offloaded 74,200 shares in on-market trades at A$4.69 apiece on Feb. 23, an ASX filing shows. Her remaining indirect holding is now 4,000 shares.

UBS upgraded Ramelius to “Buy” from “Neutral,” leaving its A$5.20 price target unchanged. The move follows a larger-than-expected interim dividend and a faster production ramp-up, which comes despite a recent pinch in free cash flow tied to investment. UBS still sees first stoping at Never Never underground starting sometime between March and April. FNArena.com

In February, Ramelius used a conference stage to pitch its bigger-picture goals, targeting more than 500,000 ounces in yearly output by FY30. Management highlighted healthy cash and gold reserves, circling back to shareholder returns and the headline A$250 million buyback. The term “AISC” also surfaced, with the company marking all-in sustaining cost as its go-to metric for stacking up against competitors.

Gold’s peers usually run together when bullion starts moving, but the group rarely stays unified for long. Investors start to splinter, zeroing in on delivery risks, how costs stack up, and whether the so-called “growth story” is more than just extra leverage in disguise.

Buybacks can disappear overnight; nothing guarantees they’ll stick around. Shares jump, or a company faces heftier spending needs, and those repurchases can vanish just as quickly. Throw in even small director sales, and in a jumpy market, you’ll see fresh volatility.

The dividend timeline is next up for investors. Market Index puts the interim dividend ex-date at March 16, with payouts to follow on April 15. April 28 is when the next quarterly report is due.

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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