On June 22, BHP Group fell 3.53% in pre-market trading, trading at $84.72/share, with turnover of $760,000, as selling pressure continued following the company's announcement of a major asset impairment.
On the news front, BHP disclosed that it expects to record an impairment charge of approximately $2.3 billion related to its Jansen Stage 2 potash expansion project in Saskatchewan, Canada, after the total investment estimate surged from $4.9 billion to $6.9 billion — a 41% increase. The cost blowout is attributed to additional construction labor requirements, increased material needs, and inflation-related cost escalation. As of the end of May, Stage 2 was approximately 16% complete with engineering work 83% finished, and first production is now expected in late 2031. Upon reaching full capacity, Stage 2 would add 4.36 million metric tonnes of annual potash production, with combined output from both stages representing roughly 10% of global potash supply.
Peer Rio Tinto declined 2.09% over the same period, reflecting broad sector pressure across diversified metals and mining names.
(The above content is based on publicly available market information, generated by a program or algorithm, and is intended solely as a stock movement alert. It does not constitute investment advice or a basis for trading decisions.)
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