Champion Iron shares: Why the pressure could be temporary

A little boy holds up a barbell with big silver weights at each end.

There is a clear disconnect in Champion Iron Ltd (ASX: CIA) right now.

Champion Iron shares have fallen approximately 27% in 2026.

Yet the company produced 3.4 million wet metric tonnes of high-purity 66.2% iron ore in the March quarter, up 8% year on year.

Moreover, full-year revenues reached $1.77 billion, up $163.2 million on the prior year. That gap between operational performance and share price deserves a closer look.

Why the market is selling Champion Iron shares

The selling has centred on three concerns.

First, Champion Iron cut its dividend to preserve cash amid volatile market conditions.

This broke a track record of consistent semiannual payments, upsetting income investors.

Second, quarterly EBITDA came in at $114 million, down on the prior corresponding quarter.

That reflected weaker iron ore price realisations throughout the period.

Third, Bell Potter retained its hold rating and trimmed its price target to $4.85 from $5, stating:

CIA expect to ramp-up high-grade concentrate (DRPF grade) production from mid-2026. While we expect iron content price premiums for this product, full value-in-use premiums are unlikely to be realised until longer-term offtake is secured. Free cash flow should improve from FY27 as capex rolls off, supporting debt servicing and ongoing dividends. On valuation, we retain our Hold recommendation.

That hold rating, at a $4.85 target with Champion Iron shares trading near $4.45, implies modest near-term upside on Bell Potter’s numbers.

The bull case for Champion Iron shares

Nevertheless, the core long-term thesis has not changed.

Champion Iron operates the Bloom Lake mine in Quebec, Canada, producing high-purity iron ore at 66.2% Fe.

That already commands a premium to the standard 62% Fe benchmark.

Furthermore, the new DRPF plant is in its final commissioning stretch.

First commercial sales are expected before the end of June 2026.

Once operational, the plant will push purity toward 69% Fe direct reduction quality iron ore.

This product targets electric arc furnaces and hydrogen-based steelmaking, the two leading decarbonisation pathways in global steel production.

As a result, demand for ultra-high-grade iron ore like Champion’s should grow materially over the coming decade as steelmakers face rising pressure to cut emissions.

In addition, the US$300 million acquisition of Norway’s Rana Gruber, completed on 17 April 2026, adds a second high-purity operation in Europe.

This should diversify Champion’s customer base into the heart of the European green steel transition.

CEO David Cataford said at completion:

The closing of this transaction marks a defining milestone for Champion. Combining our businesses strengthens our leadership as a sustainable supplier of high-purity iron ore produced with a low-carbon footprint.

Meanwhile, Bell Potter acknowledges that free cash flow should improve materially from FY 2027 as DRPF capital expenditure rolls off and the Rana Gruber integration progresses.

Foolish Takeaway

Champion Iron shares are under pressure for reasons that look largely temporary.

The dividend cut, the soft quarterly result, and the time needed to realise DRPF premiums are all near-term headwinds.

However, the longer-term story remains intact.

Champion is a high-purity iron ore producer well-positioned to benefit from the global green steel transition.

For patient investors, the current entry point in Champion Iron shares could prove interesting once DRPF sales begin and free cash flow recovers in FY 2027.

The post Champion Iron shares: Why the pressure could be temporary appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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Motley Fool contributor Mark Verhoeven has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.