Sydney, Feb 27, 2026, 18:27 AEDT — The market has shut its doors for the day.
Brambles Ltd picked up 0.6% to close at A$25.08 on Friday. The pallet and container pooling company filed an update confirming it’s still active on its FY26 stock buyback program. Investing.com
Daily buy-back notices might look routine, but they’re the scoreboard for just how quickly Brambles is cutting down its share count—a key lever for earnings per share, even if profits aren’t racing ahead. The company, for its part, has left itself wiggle room to hit pause or pull back on these purchases if the environment shifts.
Australian equities edged up to another record finish, helping to keep risk appetite buoyant through the week’s end. The stock followed suit. ABC News
Brambles snapped up 101,855 of its own shares on Feb. 25, shelling out A$2.55 million for the lot, according to a Feb. 26 filing. Prices ranged from A$24.72 to A$25.12 apiece, with Barrenjoey Markets handling the trades. That brings total buybacks so far to 12.56 million shares, at an outlay of roughly A$303.45 million. Company Announcements
Brambles, in another filing, reported it cancelled 101,855 shares, bringing the total number of ordinary shares on issue down to 1,357,878,736. Company Announcements
When a company opts for an on-market buy-back, it’s picking up its own shares through ordinary exchange trading, rather than negotiating a single transaction with a specific investor. This approach can help bolster the share price at the edges, though there’s no firm commitment — boards are free to dial things back fast if their cash situation changes.
Brambles last week tightened its FY26 sales growth target and bumped up its free cash flow forecast, sticking to its earlier guidance on underlying profit growth. CEO Graham Chipchase, in the results release, pointed to “ongoing demand headwinds in key markets.” Brambles Corporate Site
Investors are eyeing whether buy-back volumes hold steady going into next week, and if the company continues snapping up shares around recent highs after the stock’s rally this past year. Daily filings give a sense for how hard Brambles leans in when the stock weakens.
Here’s the risk: should pallet volumes dip again, or if currency moves and mounting costs cut into cash flow, Brambles might pull back on buybacks. “Capital return” trades get marked down quickly if that pace shifts.
Next up on the calendar: Brambles heads ex-dividend March 11, with the interim payout slated for April 9, market data show. marketindex.com.au