Reporting season live updates: Everything you need to know about companies revealing results to the ASX today

Day two of this big fortnight of ASX company results. Here’s everything you may have missed ...

Daniel Newell
The West Australian
Today, we see how Big Australian BHP has fared over the past six months (and hopefully find out a little more about this secretive export spat it’s had with China).
Today, we see how Big Australian BHP has fared over the past six months (and hopefully find out a little more about this secretive export spat it’s had with China). Credit: Andrew Ritchie/The West Australian

And we’re off! Day two of this big fortnight of ASX company results.

There were few champagne corks for Treasury Wine Estates yesterday but BlueScope Steel investors were simply riveted by the promise of massive payouts to come.

Today, we see how Big Australian BHP has fared over the past six months (and hopefully find out a little more about this secretive export spat it’s had with China). Joining them will be Baby Bunting, Seek, Suncorp, Challenger, Deterra Royalties and Judo Capital.

Let’s go ...

Daniel Newell

Store refurbs working for Baby Bunting

Baby Bunting says momentum from a stellar first-half of the year is carrying through to the back-end of the financial year.

Comparable sales growth in the seven weeks to Sunday was up 6.7 per cent, with stores in New Zealand leading the charge - up 17.8 per cent.

The company reported sales of $271.4 million in the six months to the end of December - a jump of almost 7 per cent on a year earlier.

Gross margin was up 124 basis points to 41 per cent - in line with its full-year target.

Baby Bunting chief executive Mark Teperson said it was a strong first-half that exceeded expectations, “demonstrating the ongoing momentum in our strategy”.

“Our record revenue result was driven by growth in our customer base, the continued success of our Store of the Future program along with strong gross margin performance,” he said.

“Across nine refurbished stores, average sales in the half are up 25 per cent since reopening, which is at the top end of our 15 to 25 per cent uplift target.”

Baby Bunting plans to complete six refurbishments in the second half.

Simone Grogan

Growing contractor SRG lifts guidance

SRG Global has upgraded its profit guidance for the full year after a strong six months to December.

Two non-execuctive directors Peter McMorrow and Michael Atkins are also due to retire and be replaced by Mark Foster and Alan Rule as part of the company’s succession plans.

Revenue for the half year was up 20 per cent on the prior period to $743.9 million, as was underlying earnings before interest deprecitation and amortisation, which came in at $71m.

EBITDA has been upgraded to land between $164m and $168m for the year.

SRG also locked away its acquisition of TAMs after the October 2025 purchase.

Managing director David Macgeorge said the contractor’s work in-hand stood at $4.2 billion.

“Our record 1H FY26 result is underpinned by strong business fundamentals, excellent cash generation and solid operational delivery for our blue-chip client base,” he said.

Daniel Newell

Judgment looms for Santos net zero ‘greenwashing’ case

The veracity of one of Australia’s biggest gas companies’ promises to slash emissions will be put to the test as the Federal Court rules on a landmark greenwashing case.

In a judgment expected to have implications for climate commitments made by all businesses, the court will rule on allegations Santos breached corporate and consumer law with its representations of environmental goals.

The case brought by the Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility challenged claims made by Santos that natural gas provided “clean energy” and that the company had a “credible and clear plan” to achieve net zero by 2040.

The shareholder advocacy group’s lawyers further alleged the energy company’s descriptions of blue hydrogen as “clean” and “zero emissions” were misleading.

Courts were increasingly being asked to determine whether long-term emissions reduction claims were backed by concrete, near-term action and credible assumptions, the expert in corporate sustainability regulation said.

Read the full story here

Daniel Newell

Contractor Macmahon ups payout after solid first half

WA’s Macmahon has hiked its payout to investors after delivering an 11 per cent jump in revenue for the first half of the year to $1.3 billion.

The engineering and civil works contractor will pay a fully franked interim dividend of 0.95c a share - up 73 per cent from 0.55c a year earlier.

Long-time chief executive Mike Finnegan said the Perth Airport-based company had reported solid increases across financial performance metrics, most notably strong growth in revenue, earnings and return on average capital employed.

Net profit came in at $48.2 million, up 61 per cent from the first half of the previous financial year. Underlying earning before interest, tax, deprecation and amortisation was 10 per cent higher at $200.1m.

Macmahon chief executive Mick Finnegan
Macmahon chief executive Mick Finnegan Credit: Supplied/TheWest

“These results validate our strategy to diversify the Macmahon Group by growing our underground and civil infrastructure businesses, both of which have made material contributions to this strong first-half performance,” Mr Finnegan said.

“Consistent with our strategy, we are focused on further diversifying our business through organic means and accretive acquisitions that enable us to expand our service offering across the resources sector.”

He said the contractor’s order book remains well supported by a balanced pipeline, with half of the $25.6b pipeline expected to be awarded within the next 12 months.

Macmahon reaffirmed full-year revenue guidance of between $2.6b and $2.8b and underyling EBIT from continuing operatioms of between $180m and $195m.

Daniel Newell

Elon Musk’s X recovers from service disruption

Thousands of users reported issues accessing Elon Musk’s social media platform X for about an hour on Monday, according to monitoring website Downdetector.

The website and app failed to display new posts and sometimes struggled to load at all. More than 11,000 users globally reported trouble accessing the service as of about 1.50pm in London (9.50pm AWST) . The service was back up and running as of 2.30pm.

A representative for X did not respond to a request for comment.

There have been several major service disruptions to X since Musk acquired the platform in 2022. The billionaire blamed a “massive cyberattack” for a series of outages last March. Dark Storm, a pro-Palestinian “hacktivist” group, took credit for the attack via the messaging app Telegram and to Bloomberg News.

The service went offline for several hours in May, linked to a fire at a data center in Oregon. X was again disrupted in November when cybersecurity firm Cloudflare experienced a major network outage that hit a range of services.

Musk’s artificial intelligence company, xAI, bought X in March 2025. XAI merged with his space-exploration company SpaceX earlier this month.

Adrian Rauso

BHP profit and dividend rises

BHP’s first-half profit rose by 28 per cent to $US5.6 billion ($8b) as revenue jumped 11 per cent to $39.5b, driven by higher copper earnings in South America and strong iron ore output in WA.

There was no word on the mining giant’s ongoing dispute with China’s state-run iron ore procurer, China Mineral Resources Group.

BHP on Tuesday also announced it would receive more than $6b after signing a silver streaming agreement covering its Antamina copper and zinc mine in Peru.

The Big Australian declared a fully franked interim dividend of US73¢ a share, up from US50¢ a year earlier.

Originally published on The West Australian

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