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BHP BHP Group Ltd

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  • 39.600
  • +0.790+2.04%
20min DelayMarket Closed Sep 13 16:00 AET
200.78BMarket Cap16.99P/E (Static)

BHP Group Ltd Stock Forum

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    huh? Chose not to over pay for Anglo. The Filo deal is right in BHP's wheelhouse: large scale long life mine for one of the pillar commodities.
    And in case you hadn't noticed Iron Ore and Copper are off their highs. As a commodity producer BHP is a "price taker" and commodities are cyclical businesses.
    BHP is a long way from being a "dog".
    My 2 cents, ymmv, dyor. $BHP Group Ltd (BHP.AU)$
    The price of iron ore has experienced notable fluctuations over the past 12 months due to various factors such as global demand, supply chain issues, and geopolitical events. Here's a general overview:
    Early 2023: Iron ore prices were relatively stable, with prices hovering around USD 100-130 per metric ton. Demand was consistent, and supply was stable.
    Mid-2023: Prices saw some volatility, influenced by fluctuations in demand from major consumers like China and supply disruptions from key produ...
    Big 4 banks rising while commodity prices dwindling. The question is how low can BHP go?
    If interest rates don't drop I'm seeing $24-34ps for BHP over the next 12 months.
    I'm cautiously buying as it drops because I know how fast it will rally when interest rates drop and commodity prices improve. $BHP Group Ltd (BHP.AU)$
    commodities have reversed off lows by the looks of it. Lithium commentary (not relevant to BHP), copper snapping back to almost $4.20, and iron ore up slightly with steel price. $Rio Tinto Ltd (RIO.AU)$ is up 2.4% in London, and $BHP Group Ltd (BHP.AU)$ is actually green despite ex dividend.
    i grabbed another 1,000 shares on Tuesday near lows. But most my top ups 39-41 for much larger quantities.
    Might be the start of the turnaround. Just need China to provide meaningful support/stimulus in Q4 whi...
    What's one luxury you had to cut back on due to the high cost of living?
    I gave up my golf club membership.
    As a recent graduate entering the workforce, my pre-tax salary of $95,000 still requires me to cut back due to the high cost of living.
    Considering I have an AUD47,000 HECS-HELP loan and aspire to purchase a home in Melbourne, I now have to look for other ways to relax, such as hiking or joining free sports leagues.
    Any recommendation on things I can do or buy for $50 or less that will imp...
    35
    We all know that mining and miners are cyclical. We have had a great, long season.
    What is probably ahead, a short-term bumpy road, is a great opportunity for long-time holders to load up some more. $BHP Group Ltd (BHP.AU)$
    1
    $BHP Group Ltd (BHP.AU)$ No global economy allows it to suffer. Greater stimulus will come. They all do it every time. Falling house prices? Well let’s stimulate with lower rates, shovel in immigrants, lower LVR ratios, grants, you name it.
    China will do larger stimulus packages is my bet, hence I put $100ks more into this and $Rio Tinto Ltd (RIO.AU)$ . Not at the bottom I’ll add, last 2 days caught me off guard.
    1
    Escondida (Chile) has a quoted Capital Intensity for expansion of between USD$17k-USD$29k per CuEq tpa.
    I am expecting that any Oak Dam development would need to be of 100,000 tpa CuEq at least (possibly 2-3 times that) to justify itself (in terms of scale to BHP, and because of depth and moderate grades released so far).
    So at Escondida rates, 100,000 tpa would have development costs between about AUD$2.5B and AUD$4.3Billion.
    I expect that this is very much at the low end, because of depth, and...
    $BHP Group Ltd (BHP.AU)$ and mineral companies did (heavy media advertising) this during the Gillard era.
    The labor government will be voted out next election so it would be a waste of shareholder money to start an advertising blitz, anyone who has done manual labour knows that the Labor Government does NOT represent them. Arguably Bob Hawke was the last Prime Minister who represented the average worker.
    There definitely hasn't been a real budget surplus during Labor's tenure. Such is evidenced by gross debt blowing out from (approx) $750b to $905b in May 2024. These are Chalmers' budget figures not mine. Chalmers is the same as the horse racing addict. Comes home claiming to have won big at the races. Great, says the wife. Lets go out for dinner. Can't, I lost it all on other races but I do have a pocketful of IOUs. Such a tedious and superficial man. Remember, he was the one guiding Swanny 12 ...

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