Woodside Energy Group Ltd stock is closing out 2025 with three storylines colliding at once: a sudden CEO transition, fresh government intervention risk in Australia’s gas market, and high-stakes execution on a global LNG buildout—especially in the United States.
On Monday, 22 December 2025, Woodside shares in Australia rose modestly, stabilising after last week’s sharp move lower that followed leadership news. In the background, investors are also digesting a major U.S. regulatory update for the Woodside Louisiana LNG project and a new Australian policy proposal that could reshape how gas exporters balance domestic supply against international contracts. [1]
Woodside share price today: WDS steadies after a volatile week
Woodside Energy shares on the ASX (WDS) closed A$23.07 on 22 Dec 2025, up 1.18% on the day, after trading between A$22.75 and A$23.13. That bounce follows a run of declines earlier in the week, including a -2.65% day on 18 Dec 2025—the session immediately after the CEO succession announcement hit markets. [2]
In the U.S., Woodside trades on the NYSE under WDS via American Depositary Shares (ADS), giving global investors a second venue to express a view on the same set of projects, dividends, and commodity-price sensitivities. [3]
The headline that moved the stock: Woodside CEO Meg O’Neill exits for BP
The single biggest company-specific catalyst in late December has been leadership shock.
Woodside confirmed on 18 Dec 2025 that CEO and Managing Director Meg O’Neill resigned after accepting the CEO role at bp p.l.c. Woodside’s board appointed Liz Westcott as Acting CEO effective 18 Dec 2025, and said it intends to announce a permanent CEO appointment in the first quarter of 2026. [4]
Why markets care: Woodside is in the middle of multiple megaprojects with complex stakeholder management—contractors, joint-venture partners, regulators, and long-term LNG buyers. Reuters’ analysis this week framed the transition as arriving at a delicate moment, with the next CEO needing to balance capital intensity, construction risk, and LNG market-cycle risk—especially as the industry stares at a possible future supply glut. [5]
Separately, Reuters reported that BP’s appointment of O’Neill is historically unusual for BP (an external hire) and that Woodside shares fell on the announcement. [6]
Louisiana LNG just got a major U.S. regulatory “runway” extension
One of the most material updates for Woodside’s long-dated growth story arrived from Washington—not Perth.
On 16 Dec 2025, the U.S. Department of Energy said Energy Secretary Chris Wright signed an amendment order granting an additional 44 months for Woodside to commence LNG exports to non‑FTA countries from the Woodside Louisiana LNG Project under construction in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana. The DOE said that once fully constructed, the project would be capable of exporting up to 3.88 Bcf/d of natural gas as LNG. [7]
The DOE statement also noted that Woodside took final investment decision (FID) on the first phase earlier this year and has offtake agreements with Germany’s Uniper, while Williams (pipeline operator) will be marketing natural gas through the project. [8]
For Woodside stock watchers, this matters in two ways:
- De-risking deadlines: Export authorisations often come with timing requirements. More time can reduce a “clock risk” that investors sometimes price in when construction timelines stretch.
- Signalling the project’s strategic relevance: When U.S. agencies highlight LNG export capacity and approvals, it reinforces that Louisiana LNG sits inside a broader national energy policy narrative—something investors may interpret as supportive (even if politics and permitting remain inherently changeable).
Australia’s new gas reservation scheme: not Woodside-specific, but a sector-wide warning light
While the U.S. update helps with project optionality, Australia delivered the opposite kind of headline: potential intervention.
On 22 Dec 2025, Reuters reported Australia will make east coast LNG exporters keep up to a quarter of output for domestic use from 2027, with a minimum local allocation of 15% to 25%, under a scheme designed to curb price spikes and address forecast supply gaps. Reuters said the policy would affect three LNG export plants in Queensland and apply to new contracts, not existing export deals. [9]
The ABC’s live markets coverage likewise highlighted that the government intends to start a reservation scheme from 2027 and says existing export contracts would be unaffected, while tracking mixed reactions from industry and manufacturers. [10]
Even though Woodside’s largest LNG operations are on Australia’s west coast (where a reservation framework already exists), this east-coast policy matters for Woodside Energy stock because it underscores a broader theme: regulatory and sovereign-risk premium is back in the conversation for Australian gas.
Reuters also captured the investor concern embedded in analyst reactions—warning the scheme could reduce incentives to produce spot cargoes and might encourage buyers negotiating post‑2027 deals to diversify away from Australia. [11]
What Woodside is building: Scarborough, Trion, Beaumont—and the “big one” in Louisiana
Woodside’s investment case is increasingly a blend of cash-yield today and execution tomorrow.
Scarborough and near-term operations
In Woodside’s Half‑Year 2025 Report (released in August), the company said:
- It determined a fully franked interim dividend of 53 US cents per share, representing an 80% payout ratio of underlying NPAT (and it cited an annualised yield figure based on then-prevailing prices and FX).
- Scarborough was 86% complete and targeting first LNG cargo in the second half of 2026. [12]
Capital Markets Day: the company’s longer-range “cash engine” story
At its 2025 Capital Markets Day (November), Woodside positioned its medium-to-long-term plan around rising cash generation:
- It said net operating cash is expected to rise to around US$9 billion by the early 2030s, representing >6% CAGR from 2024, and it outlined “a pathway” to a 50% increase in dividend per share from 2032 (company projections, not guarantees).
- It stated Louisiana LNG targets start-up in 2029, and again pointed to Scarborough LNG shipments in H2 2026 and Trion first oil in 2028. [13]
That framing helps explain why CEO succession is such a big deal for Woodside shares: these are multi-year commitments where credibility on cost control, contracting discipline, and partner management can materially change valuation.
Analyst forecasts for Woodside stock: generally constructive, but with a wide range
Forecasts for Woodside Energy Group Ltd stock depend heavily on assumptions—oil and LNG prices, construction execution, and policy risk. Still, the public consensus gives a useful snapshot of market expectations.
ASX:WDS consensus targets (AUD)
Investing.com’s consensus panel currently shows:
- An overall “Buy” consensus (7 Buy, 8 Hold, 0 Sell, in its poll).
- An average 12‑month price target of ~A$27.49, implying roughly +19% upside from the reference price on the page, with a wide spread between low and high targets (and example broker targets listed, including updates from firms such as CLSA and JPMorgan). [14]
NYSE:WDS / ADR framing (USD)
A Nasdaq-hosted item (sourced to Fintel) reported that Macquarie Research maintained a Neutral recommendation (dated 12 Dec 2025) and cited an average one-year price target of $18.07 for the depositary receipt, with a wide forecast range. [15]
The practical takeaway for investors: the Street isn’t “one story.” Targets cluster around modest upside in many models, but dispersion is huge—often a sign the market is wrestling with project-cycle uncertainty (Louisiana LNG in particular) rather than just next quarter’s commodity prices.
What could move Woodside Energy stock next
From here, Woodside’s catalysts look less like “one big announcement” and more like a sequence of credibility tests:
- CEO appointment (Q1 2026): The board has flagged a permanent CEO decision in the first quarter. The market will watch for a leader seen as capable of delivering capital discipline through peak construction. [16]
- Louisiana LNG milestones: The DOE’s 44‑month extension reduces one regulatory timing pressure point, but investors will still focus on offtake progress, partner sell-down strategy, and cost/schedule performance. [17]
- Australian policy direction: The east-coast reservation plan is not a direct hit to Woodside’s core export footprint, but it raises the question of how far intervention could go—and whether domestic supply debates intensify in other regions. [18]
- Scarborough countdown: The nearer Scarborough gets to first cargo (targeted H2 2026), the more the valuation conversation may rotate from “capex risk” to “cash flow delivery.” [19]
Bottom line for investors following Woodside Energy Group Ltd stock
As of 22 Dec 2025, Woodside stock is being priced at the intersection of three forces:
- Leadership transition risk (and what it means for project execution),
- Policy and regulatory uncertainty in major jurisdictions, and
- A multi-year LNG growth runway that could expand cash generation if delivered on budget and into supportive markets.
Analyst forecasts lean constructive overall, but the wide target range suggests the market is still debating a core question: can Woodside convert its ambitious LNG buildout—especially in the U.S.—into durable shareholder returns without letting costs and timelines run the show?
References
1. www.investing.com, 2. www.investing.com, 3. www.woodside.com, 4. www.woodside.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.energy.gov, 8. www.energy.gov, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. www.abc.net.au, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.woodside.com, 13. www.woodside.com, 14. www.investing.com, 15. www.nasdaq.com, 16. www.woodside.com, 17. www.energy.gov, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.woodside.com


