Inflation and slowing global growth is weighing on iron ore prices.Credit:Michele Mossop
BHP shareholders will receive a US80¢ final dividend,taking the full-year total to $US1.70 a share,below analysts’ expectations of $US1.72 a share. The full-year payout is down 48 per cent on last year’s dividend of $US3.25 a share,but is still the fourth-highest in BHP’s history.
The profit and revenue reset wasn’t unexpected,coming after the miner reported its highest annual profit in a decade in 2022. Last year it paid out record dividends to shareholders following a boom in prices - that have since come back to earth - for the commodities it digs up and ships to customers across the globe.
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Costs for diesel,explosives,machinery,labour and other outlays needed to run its mines inflated by 10 per cent over the financial year,although the company thinks it has passed the peak and costs are starting to peg back.
“Commodity demand has remained relatively robust in China and India even as developed world economies have slowed substantially,” chief executive Mike Henry said.
The miner’s iron ore output is tied to China’s handling of its unfolding property crisis and buoyant construction activity in India,which is underpinning an expansion in that country’s steelmaking capacity.