The world’s largest listed miner is facing a massive market correction. Shares of BHP Group plummeted 5.6% to close at A$61.4—marking its worst single-day drop since April 2025—after flagging severe cost overruns and a staggering $2.3 Billion charge at its flagship Jansen potash project in Canada.
The critical financial data and metrics behind the market selloff:
⚡ The $2 Billion Cost Escalation Blueprint
- The Stage 2 Price Jump: BHP sharply raised the capital estimate for Jansen’s second stage to $6.9 Billion—up a massive $2 billion from the previous $4.9 Billion projection due to inflation and design changes.
- The Stage 1 Premium: This follows a prior announcement that Stage 1 is expected to cost $8.4 Billion, nearly 50% higher than its initial 2021 approval budget. Production is slated for mid-2027.
- The Index Spillover: The sharp drop erased billions in market cap, dragging the broader Australian mining index down by 4% in sympathy.
🌾 The High-Stakes Food Security Bet This marks the third time BHP has breached cost estimates across the Jansen project, dealing a fresh capital setback to its decade-long strategy to diversify past copper and iron ore. Despite the immediate market backlash over capital intensity, BHP is holding its ground:
- The Global Target: Once fully ramped up, Jansen aims to capture 10% of the global potash market.
- Capex Maintained: BHP is keeping its annual capital expenditure forecast firmly locked at $11 Billion for the 2027 financial year.
