Gold Mining
•72 stocks
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Nov 24, 2025
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Osisko Development Sells San Antonio Gold Project to Axo Copper, Retains 9.99% Equity Stake
Price Performance Heatmap
5Y Price (Market Cap Weighted)
All Stocks (72)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
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NEM
Newmont Corporation
Direct production of gold metal from Newmont's mining operations (Gold Mining).
|
$91.71B |
$87.22
+4.47%
|
|
AEM
Agnico Eagle Mines Limited
AEM's core business is gold mining and production, making gold its primary investable commodity.
|
$80.24B |
$164.99
+3.12%
|
|
FCX
Freeport-McMoRan Inc.
FCX produces gold as a byproduct at its copper operations (e.g., Grasberg), making gold mining a material segment.
|
$57.24B |
$40.80
+2.32%
|
|
VALE
Vale S.A.
Gold byproduct revenues from polymetallic operations support Vale's overall earnings mix alongside primary copper and nickel assets.
|
$54.88B |
$12.09
-0.04%
|
|
FNV
Franco-Nevada Corporation
Gold mining exposure via royalties on gold assets (e.g., Yanacocha, Cote Gold, Eskay Creek, Valentine Gold) represented in the portfolio.
|
$36.82B |
$198.10
+3.56%
|
|
GFI
Gold Fields Limited
Core business is gold mining with multiple operating assets and near-term production catalysts (Salares Norte, Windfall, Gruyere) across several countries.
|
$34.36B |
$40.19
+4.51%
|
|
AU
AngloGold Ashanti Plc
AngloGold Ashanti is a gold-focused mining company with a portfolio of major gold assets (Geita, Kibali, Obuasi, Tropicana, etc.) and Nevada development projects, making Gold Mining its core product category.
|
$33.32B |
$83.02
+4.02%
|
|
KGC
Kinross Gold Corporation
Kinross Gold directly engages in gold mining operations to produce gold, making Gold Mining a core product category.
|
$29.98B |
$25.77
+5.68%
|
|
AGI
Alamos Gold Inc.
AGI directly operates gold mining assets and is positioned as a gold-focused producer.
|
$13.71B |
$34.00
+4.20%
|
|
HMY
Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited
Harmony directly mines and processes gold, a core asset and production driver.
|
$10.49B |
$17.64
+6.07%
|
|
CDE
Coeur Mining, Inc.
Direct production and mining of gold, a primary product for Coeur Mining.
|
$8.99B |
$14.80
+5.83%
|
|
HL
Hecla Mining Company
HL produces gold from assets like Greens Creek and Casa Berardi, making Gold Mining a core activity.
|
$8.96B |
$14.40
+7.66%
|
|
IAG
IAMGOLD Corporation
IAMGOLD is an operator of multiple gold mines (Côté Gold, Essakane, Westwood) and focuses on gold production.
|
$7.36B |
$13.79
+7.10%
|
|
HBM
Hudbay Minerals Inc.
Gold mining is a key part of Hudbay's diversified metals mix, via Snow Lake and New Britannia.
|
$5.87B |
$15.61
+4.77%
|
|
BVN
Compañía de Minas Buenaventura S.A.A.
BVN is primarily a gold mining company with San Gabriel expected to be a major gold-producing asset.
|
$5.85B |
$23.44
+1.82%
|
|
EGO
Eldorado Gold Corporation
Eldorado Gold's core business is gold mining, with Lamaque and Kisladag producing gold ounces; Skouries adds copper output and diversifies the gold-focused portfolio.
|
$5.56B |
$28.45
+4.83%
|
|
NGD
New Gold Inc.
New Gold directly produces gold via its Rainy River and New Afton mining operations.
|
$5.34B |
$7.21
+6.89%
|
|
EQX
Equinox Gold Corp.
Direct product: EQX is a gold mining producer with cornerstone Canadian mines (Greenstone and Valentine) and additional exploration/assets driving production.
|
$5.10B |
$12.54
+5.42%
|
|
BTG
B2Gold Corp.
BTG directly produces gold from multiple mines, making Gold Mining its core product category.
|
$5.00B |
$4.12
+8.27%
|
|
SSRM
SSR Mining Inc.
SSR Mining directly mines and produces gold, a core product, aligning with the Gold Mining category.
|
$4.09B |
$21.34
+5.80%
|
|
ORLA
Orla Mining Ltd.
Orla Mining is a multi-asset gold producer with Camino Rojo (Mexico) and Musselwhite (Canada), plus South Railroad development in Nevada, targeting ~500,000 ounces of gold annually—directly aligning with Gold Mining as the core business.
|
$3.72B |
$12.38
+6.86%
|
|
AG
First Majestic Silver Corp.
Gold mining is a significant byproduct/co-product alongside silver in their asset base.
|
$3.36B |
$11.92
+7.19%
|
|
NG
NovaGold Resources Inc.
NovaGold's primary asset is the Donlin Gold project, a large-scale gold mining development with substantial Measured & Indicated resources, making Gold Mining its core direct product/activity.
|
$3.34B |
$8.54
+4.08%
|
|
RBTK
Zhen Ding Resources Inc.
Core business: gold mining operations and ore processing via the Wuxi Gold Mine.
|
$2.85B |
$25.68
|
|
FSM
Fortuna Mining Corp.
Fortuna's core production is gold from Séguéla and other gold-focused assets (Diamba Sud), making Gold Mining a direct product category.
|
$2.58B |
$8.96
+8.81%
|
|
CGAU
Centerra Gold Inc.
Centerra is a gold mining company with Mount Milligan and Öksüt producing gold.
|
$2.46B |
$12.18
+5.00%
|
|
PPTA
Perpetua Resources Corp.
Core asset is gold mining at the Stibnite Gold Project in Idaho, producing gold.
|
$2.38B |
$23.61
+6.69%
|
|
ERO
Ero Copper Corp.
The Xavantina mine's gold production (guidance of 60,000–65,000 oz/year) indicates gold mining as a material segment alongside copper.
|
$2.23B |
$22.68
+5.00%
|
|
SA
Seabridge Gold Inc.
Seabridge's flagship KSM project is a gold deposit with future copper potential; primary current focus is gold mining development.
|
$2.13B |
$24.88
+5.58%
|
|
ARMN
Aris Mining Corporation
Aris Mining directly operates gold mining activities at Segovia and Marmato, the core revenue drivers.
|
$1.98B |
$12.64
+8.73%
|
|
SKE
Skeena Resources Limited
Eskay Creek is described as a flagship gold mining project aimed at production, making Gold Mining a direct product category.
|
$1.89B |
$18.55
+5.19%
|
|
EXK
Endeavour Silver Corp.
Gold is produced as a byproduct and integrated into recoveries; Endeavour's operations include gold mining activity.
|
$1.77B |
$7.51
+4.23%
|
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SVM
Silvercorp Metals Inc.
Gold mining is a significant and growing component, supported by El Domo and Condor projects.
|
$1.37B |
$6.67
+6.13%
|
|
TGB
Taseko Mines Limited
New Prosperity is a copper-gold asset with potential gold production; represents long-term exposure to gold mining.
|
$1.28B |
$4.37
+2.71%
|
|
VZLA
Vizsla Silver Corp.
The Panuco district is a silver-gold deposit with indicated gold content, making Gold Mining a direct fit.
|
$1.16B |
$4.24
+5.09%
|
|
MUX
McEwen Mining Inc.
MUX's primary operations include gold mining at Gold Bar and San José, making Gold Mining a core revenue driver.
|
$868.95M |
$17.25
+7.41%
|
|
NEXA
Nexa Resources S.A.
Gold is mentioned as a by-product from Nexa's portfolio, contributing to revenue/production mix.
|
$833.04M |
$6.28
-0.16%
|
|
IAUX
i-80 Gold Corp.
Core product: mining and sale of gold (Nevada), IAUX's primary revenue driver.
|
$805.85M |
$1.01
+2.28%
|
|
TMQ
Trilogy Metals Inc.
Bornite and associated mineralization include gold; future mining could include gold production.
|
$701.31M |
$3.90
-8.78%
|
|
ASM
Avino Silver & Gold Mines Ltd.
Directly produces gold as part of its mining operations, qualifying Avino as Gold Mining.
|
$590.94M |
$4.62
+6.08%
|
|
CMCL
Caledonia Mining Corporation Plc
Caledonia's Blanket Mine is a gold mining operation, representing the core revenue-generating activity.
|
$518.60M |
$28.17
+4.37%
|
|
GAU
Galiano Gold Inc.
GAU's core business is gold mining at the Asanko Gold Mine in Ghana, directly producing gold.
|
$516.45M |
$2.17
+7.71%
|
|
IDR
Idaho Strategic Resources, Inc.
IDR directly produces gold at the Golden Chest Mine and processes ore at the New Jersey Mill, constituting core Gold Mining operations.
|
$482.74M |
$35.20
+5.77%
|
|
DC
Dakota Gold Corp.
Dakota Gold's direct business is gold mining and development of gold deposits (notably Richmond Hill) in the Homestake District.
|
$443.76M |
$4.13
+4.68%
|
|
NFGC
New Found Gold Corp.
Directly engaged in gold mining and development of a gold deposit with production potential.
|
$419.55M |
$2.21
+4.50%
|
|
WRN
Western Copper and Gold Corporation
Gold mining within the Casino multi-metal deposit.
|
$410.34M |
$2.21
+6.52%
|
|
USAS
Americas Gold and Silver Corporation
Gold mining is listed as part of the asset base and potential revenue stream.
|
$387.37M |
$3.88
+7.02%
|
|
NEWP
New Pacific Metals Corp.
The company’s Bolivian asset base also includes gold deposits, establishing a gold mining exposure.
|
$377.93M |
$2.29
+4.32%
|
|
HYMC
Hycroft Mining Holding Corporation
HYMC directly operates the Hycroft Mine with gold production potential, making Gold Mining a core product category.
|
$375.96M |
$9.54
-0.57%
|
|
THM
International Tower Hill Mines Ltd.
THM's flagship Livengood Gold Project positions the company as a gold mining asset in development, aligning with Gold Mining.
|
$305.59M |
$1.66
+12.59%
|
|
ODV
Osisko Development Corp.
ODV is focused on developing and producing gold from the Cariboo Gold Project, making Gold Mining a core direct product.
|
$266.60M |
$3.25
+4.01%
|
|
CTGO
Contango Ore, Inc.
CTGO's core business is gold mining and production via the Manh Choh project (Peak Gold JV).
|
$263.91M |
$21.62
+3.82%
|
|
ITRG
Integra Resources Corp.
Integra Resources is delivering gold production from the Florida Canyon mine and developing the DeLamar/Nevada North pipeline, making Gold Mining its core revenue driver.
|
$252.11M |
$3.04
+6.84%
|
|
GLDG
GoldMining Inc.
GLDG's core business is the exploration and development of gold assets (GoldMining), with a diversified Americas portfolio and no current production.
|
$248.23M |
$1.36
+5.00%
|
|
USAU
U.S. Gold Corp.
CK Gold Project directly yields gold as a core product (gold mining).
|
$207.30M |
$15.49
+4.80%
|
|
VGZ
Vista Gold Corp.
Mt Todd is Vista Gold's flagship gold mining project, making gold production the core business activity.
|
$201.54M |
$1.67
+3.42%
|
|
PLG
Platinum Group Metals Ltd.
Waterberg's PGM project includes gold as a by-product, creating exposure to Gold Mining.
|
$188.56M |
$1.93
+4.62%
|
|
TRX
TRX Gold Corporation
TRX Gold's Buckreef Gold Project directly produces gold; mining is the core business.
|
$174.62M |
$0.65
+4.80%
|
|
LODE
Comstock Inc.
Gold mining activity and Dayton Consolidated project with potential cash flow.
|
$121.45M |
$3.21
-4.88%
|
|
USGO
U.S. GoldMining Inc.
Whistler Gold-Copper Project with identified gold mineralization; primary asset driving value.
|
$114.14M |
$9.28
+3.11%
|
|
PZG
Paramount Gold Nevada Corp.
Paramount Gold Nevada's Grassy Mountain and Sleeper projects are gold-focused assets, making it a direct Gold Mining company with active exploration/development.
|
$96.18M |
$1.23
-1.21%
|
|
ATLX
Atlas Lithium Corporation
Gold mining exposure through Atlas Critical Minerals holdings.
|
$95.37M |
$4.87
|
|
GORO
Gold Resource Corporation
Gold Resource Corporation primarily produces gold (doré) from its Don David Gold Mine and the Back Forty Project, making Gold Mining a core output.
|
$89.59M |
$0.67
+1.66%
|
|
AUGG
Augusta Gold Corp.
Directly engages in gold mining activities via its Nevada gold assets (Reward and Bullfrog projects), representing its primary production-focused objective.
|
$83.84M |
$1.22
|
|
OMEX
Odyssey Marine Exploration, Inc.
Ownership stake in the Lihir Gold Project adds exposure to gold mining development.
|
$80.44M |
$1.72
-3.65%
|
|
FURY
Fury Gold Mines Limited
Fury Gold Mines’ core assets are gold exploration projects and an operating focus on advancing gold deposits, indicating direct gold mining activity potential.
|
$78.30M |
$0.52
+0.10%
|
|
XPL
Solitario Zinc Corp.
Golden Crest is a gold project controlled by the company, anchoring its metal focus in gold mining.
|
$50.72M |
$0.59
+4.07%
|
|
THMG
Thunder Mountain Gold, Inc.
South Mountain is a gold-focused project, making Gold Mining the core direct product/diversified output.
|
$48.03M |
$0.52
|
|
DYNR
DynaResource, Inc.
DynaResource operates a high-grade gold mine (San José de Gracia) with Proven & Probable reserves and plans for ongoing production, directly categorizing the business as Gold Mining.
|
$25.33M |
$1.43
|
|
NAMM
Namib Minerals Ordinary Shares
NAMM is described as a Nasdaq-listed African gold producer with established gold mines in Zimbabwe, making gold mining a core direct product.
|
$24.60M |
$1.53
-8.93%
|
|
RYES
Rise Gold Corp.
The company’s direct focus is on gold mining at the Idaho-Maryland Mine, with potential production of gold concentrates.
|
$19.26M |
$0.16
|
|
LBSR
Liberty Star Uranium & Metals Corp.
Reported bonanza gold grades at Red Rock Canyon, signaling gold mining potential.
|
$3.02M |
$0.04
|
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# Executive Summary
* A historic surge in gold prices is driving record revenues across the industry, fueled by safe-haven demand and strong central bank purchasing.
* However, severe cost inflation in labor and energy, coupled with price-linked royalties, is significantly compressing margins, preventing the full benefit of high prices from reaching the bottom line.
* Geopolitical risk and resource nationalism have emerged as a critical point of divergence, punishing companies in unstable regions while creating a valuation premium for those in safe jurisdictions.
* In response to long-term reserve depletion, the industry is undergoing a wave of consolidation, with companies pursuing M&A to add scale, secure future production, and de-risk portfolios.
* The most successful operators in 2025-2026 will be those who can leverage high gold prices while mitigating risk through disciplined cost control and a focus on politically stable jurisdictions.
## Key Trends & Outlook
The gold mining industry is operating in a historically bullish market in 2025, with gold prices forecast to average $3,675 per ounce by year-end. This price surge, driven by geopolitical uncertainty and record central bank buying, has pushed miners' realized prices to unprecedented levels, with leaders like Newmont achieving an average realized gold price of $3,320 per ounce in Q2 2025. This revenue boom is being directly challenged by severe inflationary pressures, with labor costs rising by 7% and energy costs by 15% compared to the 2019-2023 average. This dynamic is the central tension in the industry, as rising All-In Sustaining Costs (AISC) are eroding margins and preventing record revenues from translating into record profits. Companies with unique hedges, like Harmony Gold's rand-denominated cost base, where over 90% of operating costs are rand-denominated, are better insulated, while others see AISC guidance increase by over 10%.
Beyond broad inflation, geopolitical risk is the primary factor creating clear winners and losers. Rising resource nationalism in West Africa and regulatory uncertainty in Latin America are disrupting operations and altering project economics. For example, IAMGOLD's cash costs at its Essakane mine reached $1,855 per ounce and AISC $2,224 per ounce in Q2 2025, primarily due to increased royalties triggered when gold prices exceed $3,000 per ounce. Meanwhile, Equinox Gold's Los Filos mine in Mexico is currently suspended due to the expiry of a land access agreement. This has placed a significant valuation premium on companies like Agnico Eagle, which have deliberately focused their portfolios in politically stable jurisdictions, particularly Canada, to mitigate risk.
The primary opportunity lies in leveraging record cash flows to acquire assets and consolidate the industry, addressing the long-term risk of reserve depletion. The greatest risk is a margin squeeze where costs continue to rise faster than the gold price, coupled with a company-specific geopolitical event that halts production indefinitely. This makes operational efficiency and jurisdictional safety the most critical strategic priorities.
## Competitive Landscape
The gold mining industry is in a period of intense consolidation, with 18 deals over CA$1 billion announced or closed from January 2024 to mid-2025, totaling approximately CA$47 billion. This is creating larger, more diversified leaders and increasing the pressure on smaller producers.
One competitive model is that of **Global, Diversified Majors**. These companies achieve massive scale through a portfolio of long-life assets spread across multiple continents and, in some cases, multiple commodities like copper. They leverage their scale to fund large-scale technology implementation, access cheaper capital, and weather regional disruptions. Their key advantage lies in portfolio diversification, which provides resilience, and the ability to sell non-core assets to fund growth, alongside leadership in technology and efficiency. However, a key vulnerability is their inherent exposure to multiple geopolitical jurisdictions, and large, complex organizations can be slow to adapt. Newmont Corporation exemplifies this strategy, having completed a multi-year transformation including the integration of the Newcrest acquisition in November 2023 and the divestment of six non-core assets.
Another distinct model is that of **Jurisdictional Safety Specialists**. These operators forgo global diversification to concentrate assets in a few politically stable, low-risk countries, primarily in North America and Australia. Their core bet is that lower political risk outweighs the lack of geographic diversification. The key advantage of this approach is a reduced risk of nationalization, punitive tax changes, or operational disruptions from civil unrest, which often commands a premium valuation from risk-averse investors. Conversely, a key vulnerability is concentrated exposure to regulatory changes within those "safe" jurisdictions, along with potentially higher labor and environmental compliance costs. Agnico Eagle Mines Limited is a prime example, focusing on politically stable jurisdictions, particularly Canada, to mitigate risk.
**Niche & Specialized Operators** represent a third model, focusing on a specific, often unconventional, part of the value chain where they can build deep expertise and a competitive moat, thereby avoiding direct competition with majors in traditional mining. Their key advantage is high operational efficiency in their niche, often carrying a positive ESG or environmental story. However, their highly concentrated business model is vulnerable to single-point failures in technology, regulation, or commodity pricing. DRDGOLD Limited embodies this strategy, specializing in the retreatment of surface mine tailings in South Africa.
Finally, **Development-Stage Giants** focus on owning and de-risking a world-class, undeveloped ore body in a safe jurisdiction. Their emphasis is not on current production but on advancing the project through permitting and feasibility to either build it or sell it to a major. This model offers investors the highest leverage to a rising gold price, as a large, high-grade discovery is a rare and highly valuable asset. The primary vulnerabilities include a lack of current revenue or cash flow, high exposure to permitting delays and financing risk, and a valuation based on future potential rather than current performance. NovaGold Resources Inc. is a pure-play example, with its sole focus on the Donlin Gold project in Alaska, which boasts 40 million ounces at an exceptional 2.25 g/t grade.
The key competitive battlegrounds are now jurisdictional risk management and cost control, as companies navigate a volatile market and complex operating environment.
## Financial Performance
### Revenue
The gold mining industry is experiencing strong, industry-wide revenue growth. Most companies are reporting record or near-record revenues in Q2 and Q3 2025. This pattern is driven exclusively by the historic surge in the market price of gold. The ability to realize prices well above $3,000 per ounce is lifting the top line for all producers, regardless of their operational efficiency or geographic location. Newmont Corporation's Q2 2025 average realized gold price of $3,320 per ounce exemplifies the powerful tailwind benefiting the entire sector.
{{chart_0}}
### Profitability
Despite high revenues, the industry is characterized by significant margin pressure and divergence among producers. All-in Sustaining Costs (AISC) figures show a wide spread, from sub-$1,000 per ounce for cost leaders in some quarters to over $2,200 per ounce for geopolitically challenged operators.
{{chart_1}}
This bifurcation is driven by two of the report's key material factors: cost inflation and geopolitics. Companies with disciplined cost structures and operations in stable jurisdictions are preserving margins, while others are seeing profits eroded by rising input costs and punitive, price-linked royalty regimes imposed by host governments. This is clear when comparing B2Gold Corp., which reduced its consolidated cash cost guidance for Fekola, Masbate, and Otjikoto to $740-$800 per ounce produced, partly due to lower-than-expected fuel costs. In contrast, IAMGOLD Corporation's AISC at its Essakane mine ballooned to $2,224 per ounce in Q2 2025, specifically because of increased royalties triggered when gold prices exceeded $3,000 per ounce.
### Capital Allocation
Capital allocation in the gold mining industry shows a dual focus on strategic M&A to secure future growth and returning capital to shareholders. Companies are using the cash windfall from high gold prices to solve the long-term structural problem of reserve depletion. This has fueled a wave of consolidation as producers seek to acquire long-life assets, often in safer jurisdictions. Gold Fields Limited's acquisition of Osisko Mining in October 2024 for 100% ownership of the Windfall project and its signed acquisition of Gold Road in Q2 2025 to consolidate ownership of the Gruyere mine are prime examples of deploying capital to secure a multi-decade production profile.
### Balance Sheet
Balance sheets across the gold mining industry are generally strong and improving for most producers. Strong cash flow from high gold prices is allowing companies to strengthen their financial positions, fund growth initiatives, and manage debt. Some are actively de-risking by divesting assets in challenging jurisdictions to improve financial flexibility. Alamos Gold Inc.'s sale of its Turkish Development Projects for $470 million in September 2025 is a clear example of a company using an asset sale to significantly de-risk and strengthen its balance sheet.
{{chart_2}}