Sydney, Feb 27, 2026, 16:55 AEDT — The market has closed.
- BHP climbed 1.1% to finish at A$58.41, marking its best close in a year.
- ASX 200 closed at a fresh record, with miners and top earnings performers drawing investor support.
- BHP’s interim dividend timing is next up, with attention also moving to the next chapter in China iron ore negotiations.
BHP Group (BHP.AX) finished Friday at A$58.41, up 1.1% — that’s a one-year high for the shares. Investing.com
BHP’s closing level puts the stock right in focus for next week. It’s a bellwether for both copper and bulk commodities—and after earnings season shook things up for miners, plenty of investors have piled in, making it a crowded trade.
The dividend calendar is starting to take shape, and timing’s getting tight. BHP set its ex-dividend date for March 5 on both the ASX and London Stock Exchange. Anyone buying on or after that day misses out on the interim dividend. The record date falls on March 6, with payment scheduled for March 26. BHP
The S&P/ASX 200 index notched a fresh record on Friday, adding 0.25% to finish at 9,198.60, with the late-February rally pushing the benchmark higher. ABC News
Mining stocks were on the move the previous day. According to Reuters, the miners sector surged to a fresh record Thursday as copper touched a two-week peak, sending BHP and Rio Tinto higher during the session. The Star
BHP has doubled down on copper since its half-year print, bumping up FY26 copper guidance and highlighting bigger ambitions in both copper and potash. “This half marks a milestone for BHP with Copper contributing the largest share of our overall earnings,” said chief executive Mike Henry. BHP
That dividend landed well with investors. “They smashed everyone’s expectations from a dividend perspective,” said Andy Forster, portfolio manager at Argo Investments, after the company announced its results and interim payout. Reuters
The rally narrows the margin for error. China Minerals Resources Group, the state-supported buyer, has been pushing iron ore sellers for improved terms—cranking up the pressure in negotiations and underscoring that bulk pricing remains a key lever for BHP’s cash flow. Reuters
The macro backdrop might tip the scales. On Friday, Asian markets lost ground, with investors fretting over tech valuations and geopolitical risks—factors sending some cash toward the yen and U.S. Treasuries. That sort of environment tends to spill into commodities if nerves persist. Reuters
BHP traders are sizing up three things right now: copper prices, any new signals out of China on steel demand, and if iron ore talks will keep throwing up surprises or finally settle down.
BHP goes ex-dividend on March 5 on both the ASX and LSE. That’s just before the March 6 record date, with payment scheduled for March 26.