Previous close | 8.00 |
Open | 8.00 |
Bid | 9.10 |
Ask | 9.90 |
Strike | 67.50 |
Expiry date | 2025-01-17 |
Day's range | 8.00 - 8.00 |
Contract range | N/A |
Volume | |
Open interest | 844 |
(Bloomberg) -- Rio Tinto Group has declared force majeure on alumina cargoes from its refineries in Queensland, Australia, due to shortages of gas to power its operations, according to people familiar with the matter.Most Read from BloombergIran State TV Says ‘No Sign of Life’ at Helicopter Crash SiteSpeedier Wall Street Trades Are Putting Global Finance On EdgeJamie Dimon Says Succession at JPMorgan Is ‘Well on the Way’Hims Debuts $199 Weight-Loss Shots at 85% Discount to WegovyOne of the Last
The average brokerage recommendation (ABR) for Rio Tinto (RIO) is equivalent to a Buy. The overly optimistic recommendations of Wall Street analysts make the effectiveness of this highly sought-after metric questionable. So, is it worth buying the stock?
BHP Group's options for its pursuit of rival miner Anglo American include sweetening its $42.7 billion buyout offer, making a hostile bid or walking away for now as it approaches a May 22 deadline to lodge a binding offer. As BHP weighs its next move, CEO Mike Henry and his team have been making the case for the mega-deal on the sidelines of an investor conference in Miami and elsewhere to its investors, a large proportion of whom also hold shares in Anglo. "At this stage I think it is up to BHP to try to convince enough of Anglo's institutional shareholders over the coming week that it's worthwhile pressuring their board to engage with BHP, with a potentially even higher offer on the table should this occur," Morningstar analyst Jon Mills said.