Today: 4 March 2026
Whitehaven Coal share price rises despite ASX slide as buyback keeps ticking over
4 March 2026
2 mins read

Whitehaven Coal share price rises despite ASX slide as buyback keeps ticking over

SYDNEY, March 4, 2026, 18:22 AEDT — After-hours

  • Whitehaven Coal rose 1.8% to close at A$8.34, standing out as the ASX 200 slipped 1.9%.
  • The miner bought back 65,440 shares on Tuesday, an ASX filing showed.
  • Focus now turns to China policy news, due March 5, and the latest on the company’s pending buyback plans.

Whitehaven Coal Limited (ASX:WHC) finished Wednesday up 1.8% at A$8.34, defying a sharp 1.94% drop for the S&P/ASX 200. The stock remains about 10% lower for the month, though it’s up 43% over the past year. Market Index

Miners took a beating, but the outperformance stood out. Investors rushed to raise cash, unloading assets indiscriminately. When things get choppy like this, coal names tend to behave like macro trades—money shifts fast, nerves fray even faster.

Whitehaven stepped in for another round of buy-backs, scooping up 65,440 shares for A$534,769.99 on Tuesday, according to its latest ASX filing. The stock changed hands between A$8.05 and A$8.25 each. That lifts the cumulative tally to 698,009 shares since the A$32 million program kicked off Feb. 20 — all snapped up on-market, with UBS Securities Australia running the trade. The company’s still operating inside the “10/12” rule, which means it can keep buying up to 10% of its shares over a year without needing a shareholder vote. Company Announcements

Buy-backs trim the share count, which can lift per-share numbers if profits hold up. But in a commodity business, timing makes all the difference. For traders, those daily disclosures serve as a real-time read on how aggressively management is leaning into the tape.

Whitehaven rolled out its buy-back plan back in February’s half-year results, coupling it with a 4-cent fully franked interim dividend scheduled for March 13. That gives shareholders access to Australian tax credits. “Whitehaven will return up to $64 million of capital to shareholders,” CEO Paul Flynn said at the time. By December 31, the miner’s net debt was A$710 million, with US$500 million of that earmarked as cash for a deferred acquisition payment due in April. Company Announcements

Yancoal Australia shares were last seen trading at A$6.27, off from their Tuesday close of A$6.49. New Hope also edged lower to A$5.08, a dip of 0.39% for the session, according to price data Wednesday. Investing.com

Coal prices have been anything but stable. ICE Newcastle Coal March futures sat close to $135 a tonne, off from the $140.50 peak hit on March 3. Still, that’s about a 17% climb since early February, Barchart data show. Barchart.com

Even so, if coal prices fall, a buy-back won’t cushion the blow. A sharper dip in steelmaking demand or a stronger Australian dollar shifts attention back to costs and the real numbers coming in from sales.

Thursday brings the next daily buy-back update into focus. If risk-off selling drags on, Whitehaven’s bid faces a real test. Some stability might come from stronger commodities, but that support isn’t guaranteed.

Macro desks have eyes on March 5, when China’s annual parliamentary session gets underway—a key date for sentiment in steelmaking inputs. On Wednesday, coking coal futures in China slipped 0.27%, while coke futures edged down 0.06% as traders turned cautious, Reuters reported. reuters.com

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