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Buy if io is at $55, what about the rest of minjng, non io, etc, all mothballed,?Most Aussie IO miners will still make a profit down to about $55 USD/ DMT, I'll gather they'll cull the bottom end of the workforce as they do so that the CEOs can still make some form of bonus.
Buy if io is at $55, what about the rest of minjng, non io, etc, all mothballed,?
Fmg if not for its pipe dreams could still give dividends as pure io
but diversified miners not so easily, plus they might want go keep their cash for acquisition , or be bought back..
I see a low risk of bankruptcy, but a high one of SP collapse and low dividends returns .just commodity cycles.
Anyway, i would put a bit of money from $35 ish..just a bit..increasing exposure preferably via ETF, ideally world ETFs to get bhp and rio at a bargain on the london exchange.
Let's see how things happen in the coming quarter with Iran nuked? Ukraine peace talks? And Taiwan..
I reckon that BHP can spring back at any time, market makers can make things happen that shouldn't.Buy if io is at $55, what about the rest of minjng, non io, etc, all mothballed,?
Fmg if not for its pipe dreams could still give dividends as pure io
but diversified miners not so easily, plus they might want go keep their cash for acquisition , or be bought back..
I see a low risk of bankruptcy, but a high one of SP collapse and low dividends returns .just commodity cycles.
Anyway, i would put a bit of money from $35 ish..just a bit..increasing exposure preferably via ETF, ideally world ETFs to get bhp and rio at a bargain on the london exchange.
Let's see how things happen in the coming quarter with Iran nuked? Ukraine peace talks? And Taiwan..
BHP can lose a third of its value when the PO Iron Ore falls, as it has now well below $100. Up to a third looking back at 2008 and 2015.I reckon that BHP can spring back at any time, market makers can make things happen that shouldn't.
I followed the demise of LTR and there is no hope for it at 12% shorting unlike BHP and FMG, but not to say they can't go lower in this economic environment. Something suspect is here, 0.5 % shorting is barely a bump on the scales.
View attachment 182782
View attachment 182783
Front page of BHP website ..."We have continued to focus our portfolio on iron ore and higher-quality metallurgical coal preferred by our steelmaking customers, copper which is used in electrification and potash to make food production and land use more efficient and more sustainable"BHP can lose a third of its value when the PO Iron Ore falls, as it has now well below $100. Up to a third looking back at 2008 and 2015.
They say it is low cost for BHP but I'm not too sure.
gg
i haven't sold out of BHPBHP can lose a third of its value when the PO Iron Ore falls, as it has now well below $100. Up to a third looking back at 2008 and 2015.
They say it is low cost for BHP but I'm not too sure.
I'll not be selling but I'll join Divsie @divs4ever when he buys back in around the $32-$34 mark.
gg
I think it's just challenging times for commodity miners with the way the economy is.i haven't sold out of BHP
but intend to be very nervous/cautious about adding more , until there is some substantial changes ( maybe another punch to the face like the tailings dam saga , maybe some other change in direction that i finally like , despite the market reaction .)
given events elsewhere one would normally think BHP could leverage it's uranium exposure ... but BHP has made some intriguing decisions lately( not that i am complaining about letting WHC have those coal assets )
There are not too many chief executives who can casually dismiss a $74bn bid for a global rival as little more than a fallback option.
Yet BHP boss Mike Henry is keen to show he has quickly moved on from this year’s spurned bid for Anglo American. He has big plans to grow in copper, the hottest metal going right now.
Anglo and its temperamental South American copper mines would have been nice to have, but Henry has essentially told his investors to just forget about them: BHP is already the king of copper.
Anglo “wasn’t Plan A for us”, the BHP boss says. “Plan A is everything that you see outlined in these results, including getting better and better from our ongoing operations, but also about unlocking further growth within our existing resource base”.
Henry dedicated a major chunk of BHP’s annual earnings presentation outlining a path to grow copper output from Chile, Argentina as well as his new promising copper province in South Australia, which once up and running from next decade will be one of the richest collection of copper deposits in the world.
The ambition on copper runs in parallel with already well laid plans to spend billions building out a potash mine in remote Canada. Combined these are the two future facing commodities that BHP, today iron ore has hitched its future to.
To remove any doubt about BHP’s position. Henry offers a not so subtle reminder: “We’ve got the largest copper resources of any company in the in the world”.
Enough copper?
Henry needs to convince his investors as much as himself he doesn’t need to pay inflated prices for new assets and keep his copper crown.
However the lingering question is whether today’s pipeline of projects will be enough to sustain BHP’s position as well as grow in the face of rising global demand for decades to come.
in ( normal ) theory commodity demand should be shrinking ( except maybe uranium and copper .. and thorium if anybody is mining that in commercial quantities ) , add in inflation/cost/tax increase pressuresI think it's just challenging times for commodity miners with the way the economy is.
18 audBHP Share Price, how low can BHP go?
you're making me feel good for participating in that buyback at $37 they had a few years ago18 aud
But you got s32 and wds, had the met coal and gas then, and all which has been sold since .so a bit below 20$ maybe $20 with inflationyou're making me feel good for participating in that buyback at $37 they had a few years ago
The difference between a std business and one where your business is actually selling chunk of your assets.....Yeah, BHP's worth 50 bucks and I believe that's being conservative in the long term.
You heard authoratively stated right here, right now.
Why? Because if you look back over the last 9 years the median Return On Equity (ROE) = 20%!
ROE as been as high as 47% and low as 12%
A 20% ROE is worth 4 x book value to the eggheads at the exclusive finicky boutique (we don't advertise ourselves and participation is by invitation only - so don't ask and embarrass yourself). Share issuance has been conservative and net debt is low so no discount applies.
Moreover this behemoth has advantages of scale.
Book Value at FY24 = $13.30
Multiply 13 bucks x 4 = 50 bucks (rounded) intrinsic value.
However valuation, even one as sophisticated as this, will count for nothing in a crash and such an event looms. But I've been saying that for 5 years or whatever.
Held
Holding
$18 AUD, that's low. The US BHP ADR currently trades at approx $51.39 USD or $77.05 AUD which is a huge disconnect. What's your reasoning here?18 aud
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