Sandfire Resources Ltd
F:S2Z
Decide at what price you'd be comfortable buying and we'll help you stay ready.
|
S
|
Sandfire Resources Ltd
F:S2Z
|
AU |
|
H
|
HanseYachts AG
XBER:H9Y
|
DE |
|
Baozun Inc
LSE:0HLU
|
CN |
|
Ironbark Zinc Ltd
ASX:IBG
|
AU |
|
F
|
Fielmann AG
LSE:0MG1
|
DE |
|
P
|
PTC Therapeutics Inc
SWB:BH3
|
US |
|
F
|
Fresenius SE & Co KGaA
OTC:FSNUF
|
DE |
|
A
|
Anheuser-Busch Inbev SA
DUS:1NBA
|
BE |
|
Rieter Holding AG
LSE:0QKA
|
CH |
|
EnBW Energie Baden Wuerttemberg AG
LSE:0IHQ
|
DE |
|
S
|
SGL Carbon SE
XBER:SGL
|
DE |
|
W
|
Waste Management Inc
LSE:0LTG
|
US |
|
Gunnison Copper Corp
F:3XS0
|
US |
|
S
|
Skyworks Solutions Inc
LSE:0L77
|
US |
Sandfire Resources Ltd
Sandfire Resources is a mining company that explores for, develops, and operates mines that produce copper and other metals. Its main business is digging ore out of the ground, processing it into concentrate, and selling that concentrate to metal traders and smelters. Copper is the key product because it is widely used in electrical wiring, power grids, construction, and industrial equipment. The company makes money by selling the metal-bearing material it produces from its mines. Its customers are usually commodity buyers, smelters, and trading houses that turn the concentrate into refined metal. Sandfire sits in the middle of the mining value chain: it does the hard work of finding deposits, building mines, and turning rock into a saleable product. What makes Sandfire different is that it is a resource producer rather than a manufacturer or retailer, so its business depends on geology, mine planning, and operating costs. Its results are tied to the quality of its ore bodies, how efficiently it can extract and process them, and the prices buyers are willing to pay for the metals it sells.
Sandfire Resources is a mining company that explores for, develops, and operates mines that produce copper and other metals. Its main business is digging ore out of the ground, processing it into concentrate, and selling that concentrate to metal traders and smelters. Copper is the key product because it is widely used in electrical wiring, power grids, construction, and industrial equipment.
The company makes money by selling the metal-bearing material it produces from its mines. Its customers are usually commodity buyers, smelters, and trading houses that turn the concentrate into refined metal. Sandfire sits in the middle of the mining value chain: it does the hard work of finding deposits, building mines, and turning rock into a saleable product.
What makes Sandfire different is that it is a resource producer rather than a manufacturer or retailer, so its business depends on geology, mine planning, and operating costs. Its results are tied to the quality of its ore bodies, how efficiently it can extract and process them, and the prices buyers are willing to pay for the metals it sells.
Safety: Sandfire reported its first-ever fatality at Magdalena, calling it tragic and unacceptable, and said it immediately activated emergency protocols and is supporting the investigation.
Production: March-quarter group copper equivalent output fell short of expectations because of heavy rain, unplanned maintenance at MATSA, and a delay in higher-grade ore at Motheo.
Guidance: Management said FY '26 group copper equivalent production is still expected to land in the lower half of the 149,000 to 165,000 tonne range.
Costs: Despite higher energy, freight and input costs, the company said FY '26 operating unit costs remain on track at $86 per tonne at MATSA and $44 per tonne at Motheo.
Cash flow: Sandfire delivered record quarterly financial results with $408 million of sales revenue, $220 million of underlying EBITDA, and $76 million of net cash.
Growth plans: The company is moving ahead with a large South Australian drilling and study program at Kalkaroo, with total investment that could reach AUD 100 million and drilling that could exceed 130,000 meters over 12 to 24 months.