BHP

Prezzo BHP GROUP LTD-SPON ADR

BHP
$80,49
+$1,02(+1,28%)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-17 19:54 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-17 19:54, BHP GROUP LTD-SPON ADR (BHP) is priced at $80,49, with a total market cap of $201,88B, a P/E ratio of 13,52, and a dividend yield of 3,50%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $79,77 and $81,24. The current price is 0,90% above the day's low and 0,92% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 2,81M. Over the past 52 weeks, BHP has traded between $70,83 to $81,24, and the current price is -0,92% away from the 52-week high.

BHP Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$79,47
Market Cap$201,88B
Volume2,81M
P/E Ratio13,52
Dividend Yield (TTM)3,50%
Dividend Amount$1,46
Diluted EPS (TTM)2,03
Net Income (FY)$9,01B
Revenue (FY)$51,26B
Earnings Date2026-08-25
EPS Estimate2,79
Revenue Estimate$29,92B
Shares Outstanding2,54B
Beta (1Y)0.798
Ex-Dividend Date2026-03-06
Dividend Payment Date2026-03-26

About BHP

BHP Group Limited operates as a resources company in Australia, Europe, China, Japan, India, South Korea, the rest of Asia, North America, South America, and internationally. The company operates through Copper, Iron Ore, and Coal segments. It engages in the mining of copper, uranium, gold, zinc, lead, molybdenum, silver, iron ore, cobalt, and metallurgical and energy coal. The company is also involved in the mining, smelting, and refining of nickel, as well as potash development activities. In addition, it provides towing, freight, marketing and trading, marketing support, finance, administrative, and other services. The company was founded in 1851 and is headquartered in Melbourne, Australia.
SectorBasic Materials
IndustryIndustrial Materials
CEOMike Henry
HeadquartersMelbourne,VIC,AU
Official Websitehttps://www.bhp.com
Employees (FY)90,00K
Average Revenue (1Y)$569,57K
Net Income per Employee$100,21K

BHP GROUP LTD-SPON ADR (BHP) FAQ

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BHP GROUP LTD-SPON ADR (BHP) is currently trading at $80,49, with a 24h change of +1,28%. The 52-week trading range is $70,83–$81,24.

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Hot Posts su BHP GROUP LTD-SPON ADR (BHP)

MevHunter

MevHunter

48 minuti fa
Been diving into precious metals data lately, and there's something worth paying attention to when it comes to silver reserves globally. Most people focus on which countries produce the most silver, but the real story is actually about reserves—the economically mineable supply that could fuel future mining operations and investment opportunities. Turned out Peru absolutely dominates here with 140,000 metric tons of silver reserves sitting in the ground. They're still producing solid volumes too, hitting around 3,100 MT in 2024. The Antamina mine is their workhorse, a joint operation between some heavy hitters like BHP, Glencore, Teck Resources, and Mitsubishi. What caught my eye is that a $2 billion expansion got approved to keep Antamina running until 2036 instead of shutting down in 2028. That kind of investment signal matters. Russia's sitting in second place with 92,000 MT in reserves and pulled in roughly 1,200 MT last year. Most of their silver comes as a byproduct from copper and polymetallic mining. The interesting play here is the Prognoz mine in Russia's Far East—once it's fully running, it could pump out 5-7 million ounces annually. China rounds out the top tier with 70,000 MT in reserves, though production came in around 3,300 MT in 2024. They actually dropped from second place globally. Silvercorp's Ying Mining District is China's flagship primary silver operation, producing 6.43 million ounces in their fiscal 2025. They just wrapped up a new tailings facility and upgraded their milling capacity to over 1.3 million metric tons yearly. Poland's fourth with 61,000 MT of reserves, producing about 1,300 MT in 2024. KGHM Polska Miedź is the state-controlled producer there and here's the kicker—it's actually the world's largest silver producer by output. They cranked out 1,341 MT last year. Mexico rounds out the top five with 37,000 MT in reserves. While they don't have the biggest reserves, they're still the world's leading silver producing country overall. Newmont's Peñasquito mine is their second-largest silver asset, and Endeavour Silver's Pitarrilla project in Durango is shaping up as one of the biggest undeveloped silver deposits on the planet—we're talking 491.6 million ounces of indicated resources. Beyond these five, countries like Australia (27,000 MT), Chile (26,000 MT), the US (23,000 MT), and Bolivia (22,000 MT) also hold meaningful silver reserves. All told, the world's sitting on about 550,000 MT of silver reserves according to USGS data. What stands out to me is that some of the biggest silver producing countries still have untapped reserve potential. When you've got nations with massive reserves but room to grow production, that's where forward-looking investors might spot opportunities. The silver market's definitely worth monitoring as these operations scale up over the next few years.
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MevHunter

MevHunter

2 ore fa
Been digging into the iron ore market recently and there's actually some pretty interesting dynamics worth paying attention to if you're tracking commodity trends. So here's the thing about iron production by country - it's way more concentrated than most people realize. Australia absolutely dominates with 960 million metric tons of usable ore in 2023, basically running the show. We're talking BHP, Rio Tinto, Fortescue Metals Group all operating out of the Pilbara region. That area alone is basically the world's iron ore hub. Rio Tinto even calls their Pilbara Blend 'the world's most recognised brand of iron ore' - that's how dominant they are. Brazil's sitting in second with 440 million metric tons, and they've been ramping up exports pretty aggressively through 2023 and into 2024. Vale's Carajas mine is the largest in the world by the way. The thing is, when you look at iron production by country globally, these two - Australia and Brazil - they're basically setting the tone for the entire market. Now here's where it gets interesting. China produces 280 million metric tons domestically but consumes way more than that. They're the world's largest iron ore consumer yet only third in production. They're importing over 70 percent of global seaborne iron ore to feed their stainless steel industry. That's a massive demand driver. India's climbing fast at 270 million metric tons and actually grew from the previous year. Their NMDC is targeting 60 million MT annually by 2027. Russia's at 88 million, but obviously dealing with export restrictions and sanctions fallout from Ukraine. Iran jumped up to 77 million metric tons - they were 8th just a couple years ago, so that's notable movement. Canada, South Africa, Kazakhstan, and Sweden round out the top 10 for iron production by country, but we're talking much smaller volumes - between 38 to 70 million metric tons each. What's wild is how volatile this market has been. Prices hit over $220 per ton back in May 2021, crashed to $84.50 by November that year, rebounded to $120-130 in 2023, then got hit again in 2024 hitting lows around $91 in September. That's the kind of volatility you see when you've got geopolitical issues, interest rate changes, and China's property sector struggling all at once. The real story here is supply concentration and demand dynamics. When you understand iron production by country at this level, you start seeing how commodity markets really work. Australia and Brazil control the narrative, China's insatiable demand keeps prices elevated, and everything else is just noise around the edges. Definitely worth monitoring if you're paying attention to commodity cycles.
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