Santos (ASX: STO) CEO Sells A$5.6m in Stock While Oil Prices Surge – Is It a Buy or a Trap?

Ujjwal Maheshwari Ujjwal Maheshwari, March 9, 2026

Santos is rising on oil prices, but the CEO’s sale adds caution

Santos (ASX: STO) has been one of the standout performers on the ASX in 2026, with shares up more than 20% year to date. Then on 2 March, the stock surged another 7.8% in a single session after US and Israeli strikes on Iran sent oil prices sharply higher. For investors watching the energy sector, the question is simple: is this rally the start of something bigger, or a war-driven spike that fades fast? The answer matters even more given that CEO Kevin Gallagher sold A$5.6 million worth of STO shares just days before the rally took off.

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Why Oil’s Iran Shock Is Lifting STO

The catalyst here is not a Santos-specific story. It is a global energy shock. Following strikes on Iran, tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz dropped to near zero. That waterway carries roughly 20% of the world’s daily oil supply, and with ships pulling out of the region, oil prices jumped sharply. Brent crude climbed past the US$90 mark, with some analysts flagging the possibility of US$100 if the disruption drags on.

For Santos, higher oil prices feed directly into profits. The company produces oil and gas at relatively low costs, which means price spikes like this flow quickly to the bottom line. What makes Santos particularly well-positioned right now is that its long-awaited Barossa gas project shipped its first LNG cargo in January 2026. Production is expected to grow around 30% by 2027 as Barossa and the Pikka project in Alaska ramp up. In other words, Santos is expanding output just as oil prices surge. That is a powerful combination for earnings.

Woodside (ASX: WDS) surged nearly the same amount on the same day, which tells you this is a sector-wide lift rather than anything Santos has done differently.

What the CEO’s A$5.6m Sale Actually Signals

On 27 February, just days before the oil spike, CEO Kevin Gallagher sold 830,132 shares at around A$6.75 each, pocketing roughly A$5.6 million. The ASX filing stated the sale was mainly to cover personal tax obligations, with the rest used to reorganise his personal finances.

We believe investors should take this seriously but not read too much into it. Tax-driven sales by executives are common, especially when incentive shares vest. Gallagher also kept around 2.7 million shares and holds more than 1.5 million performance rights, so his exposure to Santos remains meaningful.

That said, the timing is worth noting. He sold near a multi-year high, just before a geopolitical event pushed the stock even higher. It is not a red flag on its own, but it is a data point that attentive investors should keep in mind.

The Investor’s Takeaway for STO

Santos has a genuine earnings tailwind right now. If oil prices hold at current levels through 2026, the combination of rising production and strong margins could deliver solid free cash flow. The bull case is real.

The risk is equally clear. War premiums in oil tend to fade once markets sense a resolution. When Israel struck Iran in June 2025, oil prices spiked and then quickly retreated. If that pattern repeats, Santos’ shares could give back a portion of recent gains.

In our view, STO suits investors comfortable with short-term volatility. For those looking to enter now, spreading your buy across a few tranches makes more sense than going all in at these levels. The CEO’s sale is not a reason to avoid the stock, but it is a reminder that insiders do not always hold when prices are strong.

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