How much upside does Macquarie tip for Rio Tinto shares?

Let's see what the broker thinks of this mining giant.

| More on:
Three miners looking at a tablet.

Image source: Getty Images

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

Key points

  • Rio Tinto shares are enjoying a boost from record-high copper prices, but Macquarie maintains a neutral rating with a price target below the current share value, suggesting limited short-term upside.
  • Macquarie prefers Rio Tinto over BHP, citing opportunities for operational improvements and streamlining, although Rio's current valuation might already reflect expected enhancements.
  • Despite this preference, Macquarie's neutral stance indicates it sees little room for share price growth beyond current levels, with focus on Rio's cost-cutting and operational strategies.

Rio Tinto Ltd (ASX: RIO) shares are having a strong session on Thursday.

In afternoon trade, the mining giant's shares are up over 2.5% to $138.88.

Investors have been bidding its shares higher after the copper price climbed to a new record high overnight.

Can its shares keep rising? Let's see what analysts at Macquarie Group Ltd (ASX: MQG) are saying about the miner.

What is the broker saying?

Macquarie is feeling positive about Rio Tinto's outlook and believes there are still opportunities for the miner to continue to improve its business. It said:

Although RIO has outperformed BHP in Australia, we think there is scope for continued underlying business improvement at this week's Capital Markets Day (CMD) via: A streamlined operating model – Deploying roles back to assets, reducing overheads and bureaucracy; Iron ore cost out – a transformation program may look to close the FCF gap to BHP from ~US$7-8/t to ~US$4/t. Unlocking copper growth – including OT ramp-up, Kennecott U/G options, Resolution and Codelco JV opportunities. Ally optimisation – Value chain optimisation in aluminium leading to more bauxite exports and re-powering of Tomago and Boyne. Lithium rationalisation – Deferring hard rock decisions and uncommitted brine capital, assessing DLE potential.

In light of this, the broker continues to prefer Rio Tinto over rival BHP Group Ltd (ASX: BHP). This is due partly to BHP's latest failure to reach a deal for copper miner Anglo-American (LSE: ALL). It notes that it continued interest in Anglo-American could be interpreted as dissatisfaction with its own copper portfolio. It adds:

We continue to prefer UK based RIO both at home (ASX) and away (LSE). Whilst expectations of RIO's improvement may be priced in, BHP's recent AAL move may see continued discounts due to perceived copper program flaws. BHP will need to demonstrate a suitable investment case to turn the tables.

Should you buy Rio Tinto shares?

While Rio Tinto is its preference, it still only has a neutral rating and $130.00 price target on its shares. This is below its current share price, which could indicate they have peaked for the time being.

Commenting on its recommendation, Macquarie said:

Neutral. With Fe supply growth, we think RIO will announce a simplified operating model at this CMD and reduce costs to buffer returns to shareholders. We continue to prefer RIO to BHP over a six-month outlook, with BHP's riskier catalyst backdrop outweighing superior asset quality.

TPs increase to A$130/£50ps for ASX/LSE on higher Ebitda and iron ore NPV increase. Unchanged valuation approach (50/50 Ebitda multiple/NAV).

Motley Fool contributor James Mickleboro has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Macquarie Group. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Macquarie Group. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended BHP Group. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on Materials Shares

Lion holding and screaming into a yellow loudspeaker on a blue background, symbolising an announcement from Liontown.
Materials Shares

Why Bell Potter rates roaring Liontown shares as a buy

The broker still sees potential more even more gains in 2026.

Read more »

A businesswoman exhales a deep sigh after receiving bad news, and gets on with it.
Materials Shares

Lynas shares slip on shock CEO exit

This rare earths producer's CEO is leaving after 12 years in the role.

Read more »

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

Silver, lithium, and critical minerals commodities book double digit gains in just one week

Here's why these commodities surged last week, and some of the ASX shares that benefitted.

Read more »

a construction worker sits pensively at his desk with his arm propping up his chin as he looks at his laptop computer while wearing a hard hat and visibility vest in a bunker style construction shed.
Materials Shares

James Hardie shares rebound from 5-year low. Is the worst finally over?

After falling 35% in a year, James Hardie shares are stabilising as guidance improves and buyers slowly return.

Read more »

A man scoots in superman pose across a bride, excited about a future with electric vehicles.
Materials Shares

Up 260% in a year, can this ASX 200 lithium stock keep climbing in 2026?

Is there still upside left in 2026?

Read more »

A female coal miner wearing a white hardhat and orange high-vis vest holds a lump of coal and smiles as the Whitehaven Coal share price rises today
Resources Shares

ASX 200 materials sector dominates as scores of mining shares hit new highs

BHP, Rio Tinto, Sandfire, PLS Group, Liontown, Regis, and South32 hit 52-week highs last week.

Read more »

Person handing out $50 notes, symbolising ex-dividend date.
Materials Shares

What's the real value of BlueScope shares? Jarden analysts weigh in

Any bidder will have to hand over more to have a chance of buying out BlueScope.

Read more »

A woman in a red dress holding up a red graph.
Materials Shares

AustralianSuper boosts its stake in takeover target BlueScope Steel

The super fund is in a strong bargaining position.

Read more »