
ASX materials stock Champion Iron Ltd (ASX: CIA) has been making headlines this week after tumbling on earnings news.Â
Champion Iron is an iron ore miner, explorer, and developer operating in Quebec, Canada. The company currently owns and operates the Bloom Lake open-pit mine which exports high-grade, low-contaminant iron ore globally.
As Aaron Teboneras reported yesterday, investors were exiting their positions after Champion Iron released its fourth-quarter results.
What did the company report?
For the three months ending March 31, the company reported:Â
- Champion Iron produced 3.4 million wet metric tonnes (wmt) of high-purity 66.2% iron ore concentrate during the quarter. This was up 8% from the same period last year.
- Revenue fell to US$414.5 million for the quarter, down from US$425.3 million a year earlier.
- Net income fell, dropping to US$23.2 million from US$39.1 million.
These results left investors seemingly disappointed, with the ASX materials stock falling over 4% on Thursday following the release.Â
Its share price is now down 22% year to date.
Bell Potter weighs in
Following these results, the team at Bell Potter provided updated guidance on this ASX materials stock.
Largely, the company delivered FY26 earnings below Bell Potter’s expectations, mainly due to weaker realised iron ore prices and higher operating costs.
EBITDA was C$499 million compared with the broker’s forecast of C$541 million, while net profit came in at C$169 million versus expectations of C$207 million.
According to Bell Potter, the increase in unit costs was driven by lower sales volumes, logistics disruptions, severe winter weather and inventory de-stocking. The company also provided little additional operational commentary beyond its April production update.
CIA elected to pay a much lower final dividend to preserve cash liquidity given volatile macroeconomic conditions, breaking a track record of consistent C$0.10/sh semi-annual payments.
Hold recommendation maintained for ASX materials stock
Based on this guidance, Bell Potter retained its hold recommendation.
The broker also lowered its 12 month price target to $4.85 (previously $5.00).
Based on this share price target, the broker sees little upside for this ASX materials stock.
Champion Iron shares closed trading yesterday at $4.78.
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.
The post Is this ASX materials stock a buy, hold or sell after sliding on earnings results? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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Motley Fool contributor Aaron Bell 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.