PERTH, March 5, 2026, 13:56 AWST
Woodside Energy Group Ltd (ASX: WDS; NYSE: WDS) reported that its Non-Executive Directors’ Share Plan trustee snapped up 4,772 shares on market on Feb. 26, paying $28.1341 each. The purchase bumped up indirect holdings for seven non-executive directors, according to Appendix 3Y filings. Benjamin Sana Wyatt picked up 1,116 shares, Arnaud Breuillac took 900, Ashok Belani and Angela Minas each received 846, Lawrence (Larry) Eben Archibald got 560, Swee Chen Goh 334, and Ian Elgin Macfarlane 170. The notices noted the interests weren’t traded in a closed period. Woodside
ASX director shareholding updates don’t usually surprise, but they can get noticed if a company’s in the thick of major decisions. Right now, Woodside’s board faces a leadership handover while managing a slate of expensive gas projects.
Appendix 3Y tracks any shift in a director’s stake in a listed company’s securities. It’s not about intent—just the facts: who bought or sold, the timing, and the exact price.
Woodside was recently trading down roughly 1.3% at A$30.35, per Morningstar figures published by Intelligent Investor. Shares went ex-dividend on Thursday, with the payout set for March 27, that data indicated. Intelligent Investor
According to the filings, the shares are parked with CPU Share Plans Pty Ltd, serving as trustee under the directors’ share plan. This setup typically signals stock is acquired and held within a board-linked vehicle, not just a personal, one-off buy.
Just weeks ago, Woodside had told investors that picking a new CEO was “a very important activity,” and the board was aiming to make that call in the first quarter after Meg O’Neill departed to take charge at BP. The company’s been in talks to offload another 20% stake in its Louisiana LNG project, with KCM Trade’s Tim Waterer describing the move as a way to “monetise a high-quality asset” and “de-risk the balance sheet.” Woodside said its Scarborough project reached 94% completion by the end of December. They’re still targeting first LNG — liquefied natural gas for shipping — in the fourth quarter of 2026. Reuters
Still, director-interest filings aren’t always precise indicators. The latest purchases, made via a trustee vehicle, are minor when stacked against Woodside’s market cap—so the stock’s moves hinge on other drivers.
Swings in oil and gas prices continue to drive the outlook for earnings and dividends. Any budget overruns or setbacks on large projects could stretch investor patience. As for the CEO search, boards have been known to overshoot their initial timelines.
The filings offer a modest signal for now—board exposure to the stock is creeping up. Investors are tracking if the CEO appointment comes through this quarter, and if negotiations over the Louisiana stake actually produce a signed agreement.