AGNICO EAGLE REPORTS FIRST QUARTER 2026 RESULTS, INCLUDING RECORD QUARTERLY OPERATING MARGINS AND ADJUSTED NET INCOME
Igår, 23:00
Igår, 23:00
AGNICO EAGLE REPORTS FIRST QUARTER 2026 RESULTS, INCLUDING RECORD QUARTERLY OPERATING MARGINS AND ADJUSTED NET INCOME
Canada NewsWire
TORONTO, April 30, 2026
Stock Symbol: AEM (NYSE and TSX)
(All amounts expressed in U.S. dollars unless otherwise noted)
TORONTO , April 30, 2026 /CNW/ - Agnico Eagle Mines Limited (NYSE: AEM) (TSX: AEM) ("Agnico Eagle" or the "Company") today reported financial and operating results for the first quarter of 2026.
"We delivered a solid start to 2026, achieving record operating margins while production and costs tracked well to plan. With gold production expected to be weighted to a stronger second half of the year, we are managing cost volatility through disciplined execution and asset optimization, supported by our regional operating model. This positions us well to deliver on our full year guidance," said Ammar Al-Joundi, Agnico Eagle's President and Chief Executive Officer. "We are excited by the strong progress across our industry leading growth pipeline and are beginning to look beyond the 20–30% production growth already expected over the next decade, with our recently announced proposed acquisitions in Finland marking a milestone in our next phase of long-term growth. At the same time, we remain committed to returning value to shareholders, through our dividend and the expansion of our share repurchase program."
First quarter 2026 highlights:
______________________________________ |
1 Payable production of a mineral means the quantity of a mineral produced during a period contained in products that have been or will be sold by the Company whether such products are shipped during the period or held as inventory at the end of the period. |
2 Total cash costs per ounce and all-in sustaining costs per ounce (or AISC per ounce) are non-GAAP measures that are not standardized financial measures under IFRS® Accounting Standards and in this news release, unless otherwise specified, are reported on (i) a per ounce of gold production basis, and (ii) a by-product basis. For reconciliations of each of these non-GAAP measures to production costs on both a by-product and a co-product basis and a description of their composition and usefulness, see "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below. |
3 Adjusted net income, free cash flow and where applicable, their related per share measures are non-GAAP measures that are not standardized financial measures under IFRS Accounting Standards. For a description of the composition and usefulness of these non-GAAP measures and a reconciliation to the most comparable measure prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, see "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below. |
4 Net cash is a non-GAAP measure that is not a standardized financial measure under IFRS Accounting Standards. For a description of the composition and usefulness of this non-GAAP measure and a reconciliation to the most comparable measure prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, see "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below. |
First Quarter 2026 Results Conference Call and Webcast Tomorrow
The Company's senior management will host a conference call on Friday, May 1, 2026, at 8:30 AM (E.D.T.) to discuss the Company's financial and operating results.
Via Webcast:
To listen to the live webcast of the conference call, you may register on the Company's website at www.agnicoeagle.com , or directly via the link here .
Via Phone:
To join the conference call by phone, please dial 437-900-0527 or toll-free 1-888-510-2154 to be entered into the call by an operator. To ensure your participation, please call approximately five minutes prior to the scheduled start of the call.
To join the conference call by phone without operator assistance, you may register your phone number here 30 minutes prior to the scheduled start of the call to receive an automated call back.
Replay Archive:
Please dial 289-819-1450 or toll-free 1-888-660-6345, access code 72715#. The conference call replay will expire on June 1, 2026.
The webcast, along with presentation slides, will be archived for 180 days on the Company's website.
Annual Meeting
The Company will host its Annual and Special Meeting of Shareholders (the "AGM") on Friday, May 1, 2026 at 11:00 AM (E.D.T). During the AGM, management will provide an overview of the Company's activities.
The AGM will be held in person at Arcadian Court, 401 Bay Street, Simpson Tower, 8th Floor, Toronto, Ontario, M5H 2Y4 and online at: https://meetnow.global/M59UWL4 .
For details explaining how to attend, communicate and vote virtually at the AGM see the Company's Management Information Circular dated March 19, 2026, filed under the Company's profile on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and on EDGAR at www.sec.gov . Shareholders who have questions about voting their shares or attending the AGM may contact Investor Relations by phone at 416-947-1212, by toll-free phone at 1-888-822-6714 or by email at investor.relations@agnicoeagle.com or may contact the Company's strategic shareholder advisor and proxy solicitation agent, Laurel Hill Advisory Group, by calling 1-877-452-7184 (toll-free in Canada and the United States) or 1-416-304-0211 (International), by texting "INFO" to either number, or by e-mail at assistance@laurelhill.com .
First Quarter 2026 Production and Costs
Production and Cost Results Summary | ||||
Three Months Ended March 31, | ||||
2026 | 2025* | |||
Gold production** (ounces) | 825,109 | 873,794 | ||
Gold sales (ounces)*** | 829,651 | 842,965 | ||
Production costs per ounce | $ 1,158 | $ 879 | ||
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 1,093 | $ 895 | ||
AISC per ounce | $ 1,483 | $ 1,175 |
* | Total cash costs per ounce and AISC per ounce for the three months ended March 31, 2025 have been restated using the Company's revised composition for periods commencing on or after January 1, 2026. Using the Company's composition of this measure for periods ending on or prior to December 31, 2025, total cash costs per ounce were $903 for the consolidated Company and AISC per ounce was $1,183 for the consolidated Company. |
** | Gold production for the three months ended March 31, 2026 excludes payable gold production at La India and Creston Mascota of 418 and 76 ounces, respectively, which were produced from residual leaching. Gold production for the three months ended March 31, 2025 excludes payable gold production at La India and Creston Mascota of 1,811 ounces and 25 ounces, respectively, which were producing from residual leaching. |
*** | Payable metals sold at Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa exclude the in-kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines. For the three months ended March 31, 2025, payable metals sold excludes 2,500 payable gold ounces sold at La India. |
Gold Production
Gold production decreased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to lower production at Macassa and Meadowbank (lower grades), partially offset by higher production at Detour Lake (higher grades and recoveries).
Production Costs per Ounce
Production costs per ounce increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to higher royalty costs resulting from higher gold prices, lower gold production and the impact of a stronger Canadian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar between periods.
Total Cash Costs per Ounce
Total cash costs per ounce increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to the reasons described above for the increase in production costs per ounce.
AISC per Ounce
AISC per ounce increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period due to the reasons described above for the increase in total cash costs per ounce, higher sustaining capital expenditures, primarily at Macassa and Fosterville, higher non-cash reclamation related costs and higher general and administrative expenses.
Refer to the Company's Management Discussion & Analysis for the first quarter of 2026 (the "MD&A") under the caption "Financial and Operating Results" for additional variance analysis on gold production, production costs, minesite costs per tonne and total cash costs per ounce compared to the prior-year period.
First Quarter 2026 Financial Results
Financial Results Summary | ||||
Three Months Ended March 31, | ||||
2026 | 2025 | |||
Realized gold price (per ounce) 5 | $ 4,861 | $ 2,891 | ||
Net income (millions) | $ 1,695 | $ 815 | ||
Adjusted net income (millions) | $ 1,706 | $ 770 | ||
EBITDA (millions) 6 | $ 2,996 | $ 1,634 | ||
Adjusted EBITDA (millions) 6 | $ 3,011 | $ 1,590 | ||
Cash provided by operating activities (millions) | $ 1,346 | $ 1,044 | ||
Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital (millions) 6 | $ 2,231 | $ 1,209 | ||
Capital expenditures* (millions) 6 | $ 574 | $ 419 | ||
Free cash flow (millions) | $ 732 | $ 594 | ||
Free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital (millions) 6 | $ 1,618 | $ 759 | ||
Net income per share (basic) | $ 3.39 | $ 1.62 | ||
Adjusted net income per share (basic) | $ 3.41 | $ 1.53 | ||
Cash provided by operating activities per share (basic) | $ 2.69 | $ 2.08 | ||
Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital per share (basic) | $ 4.46 | $ 2.41 | ||
Free cash flow per share (basic) | $ 1.46 | $ 1.18 | ||
Free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital per share (basic) | $ 3.23 | $ 1.51 |
*Includes capitalized exploration |
_________________________ |
5 Realized gold price is calculated as gold revenues from mining operations divided by the number of ounces sold. |
6 "EBITDA" means earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization. EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA, capital expenditures, cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital and free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital and, where applicable, their related per share measures, are non-GAAP measures that are not standardized measures under IFRS Accounting Standards. For a description of the composition and usefulness of these non-GAAP measures and a reconciliation to the most comparable measure prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, see "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below. |
Net Income
Net income increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to record operating margins resulting from higher realized gold prices, partially offset by lower gold sales and higher income and mining taxes.
Net income in the first quarter of 2026 of $1,695 million ($3.39 per share) includes the following items (net of tax): reclamation adjustments of $9 million ($0.02 per share), net gains on derivative financial instruments of $7 million ($0.01 per share), net asset disposal losses of $7 million ($0.01 per share), foreign currency translation losses on deferred tax liabilities of $5 million ($0.01 per share) and other adjustments totaling $3 million ($0.01 per share). Excluding these items results in adjusted net income of $1,706 million or $3.41 per share for the first quarter of 2026.
Adjusted EBITDA
Adjusted EBITDA increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to higher revenues from mining operations (higher realized gold prices partially offset by lower gold sales), partially offset by higher production costs (higher royalty costs), higher general and administrative expenses and the impact of a stronger Canadian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar between periods.
Cash Provided by Operating Activities
Cash provided by operating activities and cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital both increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to higher operating margins, partially offset by lower gold sales and higher income and mining taxes. Cash provided by operating activities was reduced by unfavourable changes in non-cash working capital balances primarily due to approximately $1.3 billion in cash taxes paid in the quarter relating to the 2025 taxation year. Total cash taxes paid in the first quarter of 2026 were $1.8 billion, representing approximately 50% of the expected cash taxes for 2026.
Free Cash Flow
Free cash flow and free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital both increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to the reasons described above related to cash provided by operating activities, partially offset by higher development capital expenditures related to Odyssey, Hope Bay and Detour Lake underground pipeline projects.
Capital Expenditures
The table below sets out a summary of capital expenditures, in each case broken down between sustaining capital expenditures and development capital expenditures by mine, and capitalized exploration in the first quarter of 2026.
Summary of Capital Expenditures | |||
(thousands) | Three Months Ended | ||
Mar 31, 2026 | |||
Capital
| Capitalized
| ||
Sustaining Capital Expenditures** | |||
LaRonde | $ 15,661 | $ 1,232 | |
Canadian Malartic | 22,761 | 987 | |
Goldex | 10,105 | 200 | |
Quebec | 48,527 | 2,419 | |
Detour Lake | 42,531 | — | |
Macassa | 19,545 | 827 | |
Ontario | 62,076 | 827 | |
Meliadine | 16,310 | 1,425 | |
Meadowbank | 23,155 | — | |
Nunavut | 39,465 | 1,425 | |
Fosterville | 22,540 | 496 | |
Australia | 22,540 | 496 | |
Kittila | 13,167 | 982 | |
Finland | 13,167 | 982 | |
Pinos Altos | 8,756 | 211 | |
Mexico | 8,756 | 211 | |
Other | 2,061 | (973) | |
Total Sustaining Capital Expenditures | $ 196,592 | $ 5,387 | |
Development Capital Expenditures** | |||
LaRonde | $ 20,397 | $ — | |
Canadian Malartic | 85,092 | 7,519 | |
Goldex | 6,080 | 1,997 | |
Quebec | 111,569 | 9,516 | |
Detour Lake | 73,444 | 6,621 | |
Detour Lake underground | 4,266 | 12,274 | |
Macassa | 24,510 | 8,819 | |
Upper Beaver | 7,316 | 16,595 | |
Ontario | 109,536 | 44,309 | |
Meliadine | 18,374 | 4,181 | |
Meadowbank | 9,174 | 22 | |
Hope Bay | 31,764 | 13,834 | |
Nunavut | 59,312 | 18,037 | |
Fosterville | 4,314 | 3,477 | |
Australia | 4,314 | 3,477 | |
Kittila | 946 | 2,600 | |
Finland | 946 | 2,600 | |
Pinos Altos | 1,821 | 11 | |
San Nicolás (50%) | 1,326 | 1,391 | |
Mexico | 3,147 | 1,402 | |
Other | 3,466 | — | |
Total Development Capital Expenditures | $ 292,290 | $ 79,341 | |
Total Capital Expenditures | $ 488,882 | $ 84,728 |
* | Excludes capitalized exploration |
** | Sustaining capital expenditures and development capital expenditure are non-GAAP measures that are not standardized measures under IFRS Accounting Standards. For a description of the composition and usefulness of these non-GAAP measures and a reconciliation to the most comparable measure prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, see "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below. |
2026 Guidance Reiterated
In the first three months of 2026, the Company achieved approximately 24% of the mid-point of its full year gold production guidance, while achieving total cash costs per ounce and AISC per ounce within the guidance range. Based on these results, the Company is reiterating its guidance for the full year 2026. Full year expected payable gold production in 2026 at 3.3 to 3.5 million ounces is now weighted approximately 48% to the first half of the year and 52% to the second half.
A summary of the Company's guidance is set out below.
2026 Guidance Summary | |||||
($ millions, unless otherwise stated) | |||||
2026 | 2026 | ||||
Guidance Range | Mid-Point | ||||
Gold production (thousands of ounces) | 3,300 | 3,500 | 3,400 | ||
Total cash costs per ounce 7 | $ 1,020 | $ 1,120 | $ 1,070 | ||
AISC per ounce 7 | $ 1,400 | $ 1,550 | $ 1,475 | ||
Capital expenditures 7 (excluding capitalized exploration) | $ 2,175 | $ 2,395 | $ 2,285 | ||
Capitalized exploration | $ 290 | $ 330 | $ 310 | ||
Capital expenditures (including capitalized exploration) | $ 2,465 | $ 2,725 | $ 2,595 | ||
Exploration and corporate development* | $ 275 | $ 305 | $ 290 | ||
Depreciation and amortization expense | $ 1,550 | $ 1,750 | $ 1,650 | ||
General and administrative expense** | $ 230 | $ 260 | $ 245 | ||
Other costs*** | $ 75 | $ 95 | $ 85 | ||
NTI Payment 8 | $ 185 | $ 195 | $ 190 | ||
Cash taxes | $ 3,400 | $ 3,600 | $ 3,500 | ||
Effective tax rate (%) | 34 % | 36 % | 35 % |
* | 2026 Guidance includes $185 million to $205 million related to exploration and $90 million to $100 million related to corporate development |
** | 2026 Guidance includes share-based compensation, expected to be between $65 million and $75 million. General and administrative expense is expected to fluctuate based on changes in the Company's share price, which affect the costs related to stock-based compensation. |
*** | 2026 Guidance includes $35 million to $45 million related to site maintenance costs primarily at Hope Bay and Northern Territory in Australia and $40 million to $50 million related to remediation expenses and other miscellaneous costs |
_____________________________ |
7 The Company's guidance for total cash costs per ounce, AISC per ounce and capital expenditures is forward-looking non-GAAP information. For a description of the composition and usefulness of these non-GAAP measures and a discussion of revisions that have been made by the Company to the composition of certain of these measures, see "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below. |
8 The "NTI Payment" is the payment to Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. ("NTI") under the Company's mineral production lease in respect of the Amaruq mine at Meadowbank, which is a royalty based on net profits, subject to a minimum profit margin. NTI Payments in this table are reflected on a cash basis with 2026 Guidance based on a gold price assumption of $4,500 per ounce. |
Cash Taxes
The Company's effective tax rate continues to be expected to be approximately 34% to 36% for the full year of 2026. Total cash taxes paid in the first quarter of 2026 were $1.8 billion, which included a $1.3 billion payment for the remaining cash tax liability for 2025. This represents approximately 50% of total cash taxes expected for 2026. The remaining cash taxes in 2026 are expected to be paid in quarterly installments ranging between $525 million and $575 million.
Cost Considerations Related to Current Market Uncertainty
While the ongoing conflict in the Middle East introduces uncertainty related to fuel price volatility and the global supply chain, the Company currently anticipates that volatility of fuel and commodity prices and currency exchange rates will be captured within the total cash costs per ounce and AISC per ounce guidance ranges of $1,020 to $1,120 and $1,400 to $1,550, respectively. Supported by the Company's regional operating strategy, with a focus on local procurement and resilient supply chains, the Company does not currently anticipate any significant risk of disruption to fuel, consumables or parts supplies across its operations. While higher transportation and freight costs are expected to persist amid ongoing uncertainty, the Company continues to actively monitor the situation for any potential impacts.
The Company's full year 2026 cost guidance is based on an assumed diesel benchmark price of $0.78 per litre (excluding transportation and taxes). Including the diesel purchased for the Company's Nunavut operations that was delivered as part of the 2025 sealift, approximately 54% of the Company's total estimated diesel exposure for 2026 is hedged at an average benchmark price of $0.71 per litre (excluding transportation and taxes), which is expected to reduce the Company's exposure to diesel price volatility for the balance of 2026.
Diesel represents approximately 10% of the Company's operating costs, comprising approximately 7% related to direct consumption for mobile equipment and on-site power generation, and approximately 3% related to transportation and freight. With respect to direct diesel consumption, the Company estimates that a 10% change in diesel prices would impact total cash costs per ounce by approximately $4 on a net basis after hedges (approximately $8 excluding the impact of diesel hedges) for the full year 2026. For indirect diesel exposure related to transportation, a 10% change in diesel prices is estimated to impact total cash costs per ounce by approximately $2 net of the fuel sealift to Nunavut.
Currency Hedges
The Company's full year 2026 cost guidance is based on assumed exchange rates of 1.36 C$/US$, 1.18 US$/EUR, 1.40 A$/US$ and 17.50 MXN/US$.
Based on its C$/US$ assumption for 2026 cost estimates, the Company has hedged approximately 42% of its estimated remaining Canadian dollar exposure for 2026 at an average floor price providing protection in respect of exchange rate movements below 1.38 C$/US$, while allowing for participation in respect of exchange rate movements up to an average of 1.42 C$/US$.
The Company will continue to monitor market conditions and anticipates continuing to opportunistically add to its operating currency and diesel hedges to strategically support its key input costs for 2026.
Tariffs
The international trade disputes set in motion in February 2025 by US tariffs, retaliatory tariffs and other actions remain fluid. The Company continues to believe that its revenue structure will be largely unaffected by the tariffs as its gold production is mostly refined in Canada, Australia or Europe. The Company continues to monitor its exposure to the tariffs and trade disputes and its alternatives to inputs sourced from suppliers that are or may become subject to the tariffs or other trade disputes. The cost guidance provided in this news release does not include any potential impact from such tariffs or trade disputes.
Balance Sheet Strength Supported by Strong Net Cash Position; Continued Commitment to Shareholder Returns
Cash and cash equivalents increased by $246 million from the prior quarter, primarily due to cash provided by operating activities resulting from record operating margins (higher realized gold prices partially offset by higher royalty costs). The increase was partially offset by unfavourable changes in non-cash components of working capital (including an approximately $1.3 billion payment of cash taxes related to the 2025 taxation year), $614 million of capital expenditures including working capital adjustments and $375 million returned to shareholders during the quarter through dividends and share repurchases under the NCIB.
As at March 31, 2026, the Company's total long-term debt was $197 million, consistent with the prior quarter. No amounts were outstanding under the Company's unsecured revolving bank credit facility as at March 31, 2026 and available liquidity under the facility remained at approximately $2 billion, not including the uncommitted $1 billion accordion feature.
Net cash increased to $2,915 million in the first quarter of 2026 compared to the prior quarter balance of $2,670 million due to the increase in cash and cash equivalents of $246 million. See "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below for the calculation of net cash.
On April 29, 2026, Fitch Ratings upgraded the Company's investment grade credit rating to A- with a Stable Outlook, reflecting the Company's strong operating profile, favorable low cost position and sustained commitment to a strengthening balance sheet. The Company strives to maintain a strong financial position and an investment grade balance sheet.
Shareholder Returns
The Company remains committed to delivering strong returns to shareholders in 2026 through a combination of the dividend and share repurchases under the NCIB, with a target to return approximately 40% of annual free cash flow to shareholders, assuming current gold prices and subject to operational needs.
The Company will evaluate opportunities to reduce the dilution associated with the Rupert transaction, including potentially returning the proceeds of portfolio investment sales to shareholders through share repurchases under the NCIB.
Normal Course Issuer Bid
In the first quarter of 2026, the Company repurchased 721,211 common shares under the NCIB at an average price of $207.68 per share for aggregate purchases of $150 million.
The Company believes that its NCIB is a flexible and effective complementary tool that, together with the quarterly dividend, is part of the Company's overall capital allocation program and generates value for shareholders. Under the NCIB, the Company may purchase a maximum of 5% of the issued and outstanding common shares, subject to maximum authorized purchases of $1 billion. Purchases under the NCIB may continue for up to one year from its commencement on May 4, 2025.
The Company intends to seek approval from the TSX to renew the NCIB for another year in May 2026 on substantially the same terms; but intends to increase its internal limit on purchases of common shares to $2 billion. Additional details will be provided at the time of the renewal.
Dividend Record and Payment Dates for the Second Quarter of 2026
The Company's Board of Directors has declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.45 per common share, payable on June 15, 2026 to shareholders of record as of June 1, 2026. Agnico Eagle has declared a cash dividend every year since 1983.
Expected Dividend Record and Payment Dates for the 2026 Fiscal Year
Record Date | Payment Date |
March 2, 2026* | March 16, 2026* |
June 1, 2026** | June 15, 2026** |
September 1, 2026 | September 15, 2026 |
December 1, 2026 | December 15, 2026 |
* Paid
|
Dividend Reinvestment Plan
For information on the Company's dividend reinvestment plan, see Dividend Reinvestment Plan .
International Dividend Currency Exchange
For information on the Company's international dividend currency exchange program, please contact Computershare Trust Company of Canada by phone at 1.800.564.6253 or online at www.investorcentre.com or www.computershare.com/investor .
Committed to Sustainability
17th Annual Sustainability Report for 2025 Released
The Company released its 2025 Sustainability Report (the "Report") on April 30, 2026, providing an overview of the Company's strategy, practices and risk management approach related to health, safety, environment and sustainability, along with a comprehensive review of sustainability performance.
The Report includes mining industry-specific indicators from the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board Metals and Mining disclosures and metrics, and certain indicators in reference to the Global Reporting Initiative standards.
The Report's theme, "Together, We Make Mining Work", reflects the Company's belief that responsible mining is achieved through collaboration. For almost 70 years, the Company has recognized that long-term success is built through strong relationships with employees, Indigenous Peoples, communities, partners and stakeholders and the Company remains committed to operating in a way that creates shared value for all stakeholders.
Report Highlights:
Commitment to the Development of Inuit Education
The Company's 2025 Sustainability Report can be accessed here .
Key Value Drivers – Building the Next Phase of Growth
The Company is advancing a disciplined growth strategy aimed at enhancing the gold production profile in the short-term and supporting a pathway to increase annual gold production by 20-30% over the next decade, with a first step-up in production expected in 2030 and the potential to exceed 4.0 million ounces in the early 2030s. The growth is anchored in the expansions of world-class assets at Canadian Malartic and Detour Lake, as well as the construction of Upper Beaver, Hope Bay and San Nicolas located in regions where the Company operates and has technical expertise, established community relationships, existing infrastructure and established supply chains, supporting compelling risk-adjusted returns.
Key Project | 2026 Gold
| Anticipated
| Anticipated
| Anticipated
|
Canadian Malartic | 575 — 590 | 2033 | 400 — 500 | — |
Detour Lake | 700 — 715 | 2030 | 300 — 350 | — |
Upper Beaver | — | 2030 | 200 — 225 | 3,600 |
Hope Bay | — | 2030 | 400 — 425 | — |
San Nicolás (50%)** | — | 2030 | — | 50,000 — 60,000 |
* | The forecast parameters were based on internal evaluations, which are preliminary in nature and include inferred mineral resources. For a description see "Notes to Investors Regarding Certain Project Evaluations" below |
** | San Nicolás incremental annual production also includes approximately 150,000 to 160,000 tonnes of zinc in first eight years of production and 20,000 to 30,000 tonnes of zinc in subsequent years |
Canadian Malartic – Potential for 400,000 to 500,000 ounces of incremental annual gold production
The Company continues to advance the transition to underground mining with the construction of the Odyssey mine, including the development of Odyssey Shaft #1 and is advancing internal evaluations on three projects that, together, have the potential to increase annual gold production, starting in 2033, towards one million ounces. These projects include (i) a second shaft at Odyssey, (ii) the development of a satellite open pit at Marban and (iii) the development of the Wasamac underground project. Marban and Wasamac are located approximately 12 kilometres and 100 kilometres from the Canadian Malartic mill, respectively.
Odyssey Development
In the first quarter of 2026, mine development advanced with a continued focus on the main ramp, which reached a depth of 1,151 metres as of March 31, 2026, and the development of the East Gouldie production levels. Production via ramp from East Gouldie commenced in March 2026, approximately three months ahead of plan. Development remains a priority, with the Company targeting a sustained development rate of approximately 2,000 metres per month, supported by the integration of new development teams and equipment, increased hoisting capacity, optimization of hauling and service activities, and the increased use of automation and autonomous hauling. The excavation of two ventilation raises from surface to level 58 and the construction of the main exhaust fan station also advanced, with commissioning expected in June 2026.
Work continued on the development and construction of the first loading station between levels 102 and 111, including the crushing and material‑handling circuit, shaft loading pocket and maintenance shop. Development activities continue to progress on schedule in support of the planned start of shaft‑hoisted production from East Gouldie in the second quarter of 2027. Shaft sinking activities continued ahead of schedule, with the excavation of the material‑handling infrastructure for the second loading station between levels 137 and 146 now expected to be completed in the second quarter of 2026 and the completion of the first phase of shaft sinking to a planned depth of 1,580 metres now expected at year-end 2026. The shaft reached a depth of 1,514 metres as at March 31, 2026. A second phase of sinking is expected to resume in 2029 and be completed in 2031, extending the shaft to its final expected depth of 1,870 metres. The third loading station, located between levels 172 and 181, is expected to be completed and commissioned in 2031.
Construction of key surface infrastructure progressed, with the operational complex expected to be completed in the second quarter of 2026 and phase two of the paste plant (designed for a 20,000 tonnes per day ("tpd") capacity) expected to be completed in the fourth quarter of 2026. The fabrication of the production hoist is complete and delivery of the various components of the hoist is ongoing, with assembly to start in the second quarter of 2026. Commissioning of the production hoist is expected in the second quarter of 2027.
Odyssey Shaft #2
The Company is advancing an internal technical evaluation of a potential second shaft at the Odyssey mine. Drilling of the geotechnical pilot hole at the planned location has been completed to a depth of 1,800 metres. Current work is focused on mine design and planning, surface layout, headframe design and preparatory activities to support the permitting process. The evaluation is expected to be completed in the fourth quarter of 2026.
Exploration at Odyssey
During the first quarter of 2026, 13 surface rigs and 16 underground rigs were in operation, drilling a total of 56,635 metres supplemented by an additional six surface rigs completing 13,455 metres of drilling dedicated to regional exploration around Canadian Malartic, including the Marban project.
Exploration drilling targeted multiple areas of the Odyssey mine, returning positive results in the upper eastern, central, western and deeper areas of the East Gouldie deposit and in the internal zones of the Odyssey deposit.
In the upper eastern extension of the East Gouldie deposit, underground drilling was highlighted by hole UGEG-103-005 intersecting 6.7 g/t gold over 36.0 metres at 1,089 metres depth, including 12.6 g/t gold over 15.3 metres at 1,089 metres depth; and hole UGEG-095-014 intersecting 5.5 g/t gold over 10.3 metres at 1,061 metres depth, 5.8 g/t gold over 9.8 metres at 1,153 metres depth, 5.1 g/t gold over 6.3 metres at 1,175 metres depth and 3.0 g/t gold over 15.8 metres at 1,187 metres depth.
In the Odyssey deposit, conversion drilling encountered significant mineralization in the lower portion of the porphyry in the internal zones, highlighted by hole UGOD-057-012 intersecting 6.1 g/t gold over 12.9 metres (core length) at 1,017 metres depth, including 12.0 g/t gold over 4.9 metres (core length) at 1,020 metres depth, and 9.0 g/t gold over 53.5 metres (core length) at 1,067 metres depth; and hole UGOD-064-019 intersecting 2.8 g/t gold over 27.6 metres (core length) at 992 metres depth, including 5.6 g/t gold over 8.0 metres (core length) at 992 metres depth. The internal zones in the vicinity of the Odyssey North zone will be further investigated in 2026 to help in planning the future mining infrastructure in this area.
Selected recent drill intersections from the Odyssey mine are set out in the composite longitudinal section below and in a table in the Appendix.
[Odyssey– Composite Cross and Longitudinal Sections]
Marban
At the Marban deposit, located approximately 12 kilometres from the Canadian Malartic mill, the Company envisions the potential development of a satellite open pit operating at a planned mining rate between 14,000 to 16,000 tpd and producing approximately 120,000 to 150,000 ounces of gold annually over a mine life of approximately 12 years with the potential for initial production as early as 2033.
During the first quarter of 2026 at Marban, the second phase of an exploration and conversion drilling program completed 29 holes totalling 7,013 metres. The program mainly targeted the northern and eastern extensions of the Marban deposit near and beyond the newly expanded proposed pit outline.
Wasamac
At Wasamac, the Company envisions an underground satellite operation with a planned mining rate of approximately 3,200 tpd. Ore is expected to be transported to the Canadian Malartic mill for processing, with an average annual gold production expected to be approximately 90,000 ounces with the potential for initial production as early as 2033. In the first quarter of 2026, the Company advanced optimization and trade‑off studies alongside permitting activities and engagement with stakeholders.
Detour Lake – Potential for 300,000 to 350,000 ounces of incremental annual gold production
In the first quarter of 2026, excavation of the exploration ramp advanced by 345 metres to a total length of 823 metres, reaching a depth of 147 metres as of March 31, 2026. The Company is ramping up its workforce and integrating additional equipment in preparation for the commencement of multi‑face development expected to begin in the third quarter of 2026. Extension of the exploration ramp to the planned bulk‑sampling location at level 200 is expected to be completed in the first half of 2027.
Other activities supporting the underground project during the first quarter of 2026 included the commencement of overburden excavation for the conveyor ramp portal near the mill, with underground ramp development planned to begin in the first quarter of 2027. Work also progressed on the construction of the camp extension, and detailed engineering was initiated for the paste plant, ore‑handling system and electrical infrastructure.
At Detour Lake during the first quarter of 2026, exploration drilling totalled 39,052 metres. The program continued to expand and infill the mineralization below and to the west of the mineral resource pit. The first underground drill was mobilized during the first quarter of 2026 and completed 726 metres of drilling.
To complement the planned bulk sample at Level 200, the Company has initiated a high-intensity drill program targeting Domain 54, similar to the investigation of Domain 53 in 2025, to validate the continuity of mineralization and improve the accuracy of the geological model. Highlights from the high-intensity drilling included hole DLM26-1299 intersecting 14.0 g/t gold over 2.5 metres at 84 metres depth and 8.9 g/t gold over 14.1 metres at 187 metres depth; and hole DLM26-1313 intersecting 2.9 g/t gold over 23.2 metres at 210 metres depth, including 8.1 g/t gold over 6.0 metres at 218 metres depth and 14.9 g/t gold over 9.0 metres at 238 metres depth.
Drilling in the West Extension zone approximately 1.5 kilometres west of the resource-pit outline continued to extend the underground mineral potential to the west with highlights of hole DLM25-1243 intersecting 28.0 g/t gold over 4.4 metres at 734 metres depth and 11.7 g/t gold over 2.6 metres at 794 metres depth; hole DLM25-1255 intersecting 2.6 g/t gold over 27.4 metres at 669 metres depth; hole DLM25-1274 intersecting 14.0 g/t gold over 2.6 metres at 797 metres depth and 3.6 g/t gold over 9.5 metres at 816 metres depth; and hole DLM25-1245 intersecting 10.7 g/t gold over 10.1 metres at 497 metres depth, including 37.8 g/t gold over 2.6 metres at 501 metres depth.
Drilling that tested the West Extension zone approximately 2.5 kilometres west of the resource-pit outline was highlighted by hole DLM25-1240 intersecting 10.0 g/t gold over 3.1 metres at 922 metres depth.
Selected recent drill intersections from Detour Lake are set out in the composite longitudinal section below and in a table in the Appendix.
[Detour Lake – Composite Longitudinal Section]
The Company also has a regional exploration program underway at Detour Lake, with $3.7 million budgeted in 2026 for 10,000 metres of drilling that will include condemnation drilling of planned and proposed infrastructure.
Upper Beaver – Potential for 200,000 to 225,000 ounces of annual gold production and 3,600 tonnes of copper
Located approximately 20 kilometres from the Company's Macassa mine, the Upper Beaver project is envisioned as a standalone mine and mill, with the potential to produce 200,000 to 225,000 ounces of gold and 3,600 tonnes of copper per year, based on a planned mining and milling rate of 5,000 tpd.
Development activities continued to advance ahead of schedule in the first quarter of 2026, with the exploration ramp advancing by 514 metres and reaching a depth of 108 metres, and the shaft reaching a depth of 382 metres as at March 31, 2026.
During the first quarter of 2026, a high-intensity exploration drilling program at a 20-metre spacing focused on a portion of the Upper Beaver deposit between approximately 500 to 600 metres depth that is dominated by vein systems that are representative of the larger deposit. The primary objective of the high-intensity drilling is to validate the mineral resource model and assess grade-variability within the most representative geological zones of the Upper Beaver deposit. This high-intensity drilling program is expected to complement the planned bulk sample at the 760‑metre level and has the potential to bring forward initial production to early 2030.
More than half of the high-intensity drilling program has been completed, starting with Zone 201 and continuing into Zone 107.
Recent highlights from Zone 201 include hole KLUB26-913A intersecting 4.5 g/t gold and 1.07% copper over 4.2 metres at 531 metres depth; hole KLUB26-881W3 intersecting 7.9 g/t gold and 0.98% copper over 6.4 metres at 555 metres depth; hole KLUB26-881W5 intersecting 18.3 g/t gold and 1.19% copper over 2.9 metres at 584 metres depth. In Zone 107, highlight hole KLUB26-915A intersected 45.5 g/t gold and 0.21% copper over 0.9 metres at 535 metres depth.
Selected recent drill intersections from Upper Beaver are set out in the composite longitudinal section below and in a table in the Appendix.
[Upper Beaver – Composite Cross and Longitudinal Sections]
Hope Bay – Potential for 400,000 to 425,000 ounces of annual gold production
In the first quarter of 2026, the Company advanced site preparations to support a potential project redevelopment, including upgrades to camp facilities, with installation of a third camp wing ongoing. During the quarter, the Company focused on completing a technical evaluation for the potential redevelopment, advancing detailed engineering to approximately 55% completion, and progressing planning and procurement activities for the upcoming sealift season, in advance of a potential redevelopment decision expected in May 2026.
In the first quarter of 2026, excavation of the Naartok East exploration ramp at Madrid advanced by 638 metres and reached a depth of 111 metres as of March 31, 2026. In 2026, the exploration ramp will continue to advance for a total of 3.3 kilometers to a depth of 185 metres to facilitate infill and expansion drilling along the Madrid zones. At Patch 7, excavation of the portal boxcut for the dedicated exploration ramp was completed and preparation for ground support activities are underway.
San Nicolás Copper Project (50/50 joint venture with Teck Resources Limited)
Regulatory decisions for the MIA-R (Environmental Impact Assessment) and ETJ (Land Use Change) permits are pending. In the first quarter of 2026, Minas de San Nicolás continued to advance engineering on critical infrastructure to increase confidence in the feasibility study, further de-risk the execution strategy and position the project for a potential sanction decision, subject to receipt of permits. As at March 31, 2026, more than 40% of engineering had been completed, with progress expected to reach approximately 50% by mid-2026.
During the quarter, drilling activities also progressed, focusing on condemnation drilling and geological evaluation near the projected mine area.
First Quarter 2026 Operating Results
Regional operating statistics and highlights for the first quarter of 2026 are set out below. See the MD&A under the caption "Financial and Operating Results" for a variance analysis on gold production, production costs, minesite costs per tonne and total cash costs per ounce compared to the prior-year period.
ABITIBI REGION, QUEBEC
First Production Achieved at East Gouldie; Strong Operational Performance at Akasaba West; Automation Initiatives Continue to Advance at LaRonde
Abitibi Quebec – Operating Statistics | ||||||||
Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 | LaRonde | Canadian
| Goldex | Consolidated
| ||||
Tonnes of ore milled (thousands) | 776 | 4,707 | 813 | 6,296 | ||||
Tonnes of ore milled per day | 8,622 | 52,300 | 9,033 | 69,955 | ||||
Gold grade (g/t) | 3.55 | 1.20 | 1.35 | 1.51 | ||||
Gold production (ounces) | 81,596 | 166,216 | 29,372 | 277,184 | ||||
Production costs per tonne (C$) | C$ 156 | C$ 38 | C$ 68 | C$ 56 | ||||
Minesite costs per tonne (C$) | C$ 175 | C$ 50 | C$ 64 | C$ 67 | ||||
Production costs per ounce | $ 1,079 | $ 782 | $ 1,362 | $ 931 | ||||
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 1,027 | $ 998 | $ 915 | $ 998 |
Regional Highlights
ABITIBI REGION, ONTARIO
Strong Production at Detour Lake Driven by Higher Grades and Strong Mill Operating Performance; Record Quarterly Mill Throughput at Macassa
Abitibi Ontario – Operating Statistics | ||||||
Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 | Detour Lake | Macassa | Consolidated
| |||
Tonnes of ore milled (thousands) | 6,748 | 149 | 6,897 | |||
Tonnes of ore milled per day | 74,978 | 1,656 | 76,634 | |||
Gold grade (g/t) | 0.90 | 11.92 | 1.14 | |||
Gold production (ounces) | 177,019 | 55,593 | 232,612 | |||
Production costs per tonne (C$) | C$ 34 | C$ 670 | C$ 48 | |||
Minesite costs per tonne (C$) | C$ 36 | C$ 660 | C$ 49 | |||
Production costs per ounce | $ 951 | $ 1,303 | $ 1,035 | |||
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 974 | $ 1,256 | $ 1,041 |
Regional Highlights
NUNAVUT
Solid Performance at Meliadine Despite Weather Conditions; Higher Grade Delivers Strong Gold Production at Meadowbank
Nunavut – Operating Statistics | ||||||
Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 | Meliadine | Meadowbank | Consolidated
| |||
Tonnes of ore milled (thousands) | 558 | 1,099 | 1,657 | |||
Tonnes of ore milled per day | 6,200 | 12,211 | 18,411 | |||
Gold grade (g/t) | 5.48 | 3.56 | 4.21 | |||
Gold production (ounces) | 93,831 | 113,862 | 207,693 | |||
Production costs per tonne (C$) | C$ 231 | C$ 230 | C$ 230 | |||
Minesite costs per tonne (C$) | C$ 270 | C$ 158 | C$ 196 | |||
Production costs per ounce | $ 997 | $ 1,613 | $ 1,335 | |||
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 1,162 | $ 1,080 | $ 1,117 |
Regional Highlights
AUSTRALIA
Strong Performance at the Phoenix Zone Drives Higher Grades and Throughput
Fosterville – Operating Statistics | Three Months Ended
| |
Tonnes of ore milled (thousands) | 216 | |
Tonnes of ore milled per day | 2,400 | |
Gold grade (g/t) | 6.31 | |
Gold production (ounces) | 41,443 | |
Production costs per tonne (A$) | A$308 | |
Minesite costs per tonne (A$) | A$316 | |
Production costs per ounce | $ 1,098 | |
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 1,123 |
Highlights
FINLAND
Optimization Initiatives Continue to Drive Strong Underground Mining Performance; Proposed CLGB Consolidation Envisions a Multi-Decade, Multi-Asset Platform
Kittila – Operating Statistics | Three Months Ended
| |
Tonnes of ore milled (thousands) | 448 | |
Tonnes of ore milled per day | 4,978 | |
Gold grade (g/t) | 4.19 | |
Gold production (ounces) | 48,527 | |
Production costs per tonne (€) | €129 | |
Minesite costs per tonne (€) | €122 | |
Production costs per ounce | $ 1,401 | |
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 1,313 |
Highlights
MEXICO
Strong Mill Throughput Driven by Solid Operational Performance at Sinter
Pinos Altos – Operating Statistics | Three Months Ended
| |
Tonnes of ore milled (thousands) | 427 | |
Tonnes of ore milled per day | 4,744 | |
Gold grade (g/t) | 1.36 | |
Gold production (ounces) | 17,650 | |
Production costs per tonne | $ 155 | |
Minesite costs per tonne | $ 136 | |
Production costs per ounce | $ 3,746 | |
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 2,311 |
About Agnico Eagle
Canadian-based and led, Agnico Eagle is Canada's largest mining company and the second largest gold producer in the world, operating mines in Canada, Australia, Finland and Mexico. The Company is advancing a pipeline of high-quality development projects in these regions to support sustainable growth over the next decade. Agnico Eagle is a partner of choice within the mining industry, recognized globally for its leading sustainability practices. Agnico Eagle was founded in 1957 and has consistently created value for its shareholders, declaring a cash dividend every year since 1983.
About this News Release
Unless otherwise stated, references to "Canadian Malartic", "Goldex", "LaRonde" and "Meadowbank" are to the Company's operations at the Canadian Malartic complex, the Goldex complex, the LaRonde complex and the Meadowbank complex, respectively. The Canadian Malartic complex consists of the mining, milling and processing operations at the Canadian Malartic mine and the mining operations at the Odyssey mine. The Goldex complex consists of the mining, milling and processing operations at the Goldex mine and the mining operations at the Akasaba West open pit mine. The LaRonde complex consists of the mining, milling and processing operations at the LaRonde mine and the mining and processing operations at LZ5. The Meadowbank complex consists of the milling and processing operations at the Meadowbank mine and the mining operations at the Amaruq open pit and underground mines. References to other operations are to the relevant mines, projects or properties, as applicable.
When used in this news release, the terms "including" and "such as" mean including and such as, without limitation.
The information contained on any website linked to or referred to herein (including the Company's website) is not part of this news release.
Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance
This news release discloses certain financial performance measures, including "total cash costs per ounce", "minesite costs per tonne", "all-in sustaining costs per ounce" (or "AISC per ounce"), "adjusted net income", "adjusted net income per share", "cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital", "cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital per share", "EBITDA" which means earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, "adjusted EBITDA", "free cash flow", "free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital", "operating margin", "capital expenditures", "sustaining capital expenditures", "development capital expenditures", "sustaining capitalized exploration", "development capitalized exploration" and "net cash (debt)", as well as, for certain of these measures their related per share ratios that are not standardized measures under IFRS Accounting Standards. These measures may not be comparable to similar measures reported by other gold producers and should be considered together with other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards. See below for a reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable financial information reported in the condensed interim consolidated financial statements for the three months ended March 31, 2026 (the "First Quarter Financial Statements") prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards. Adjustments that are not applicable in respect of the periods for which reconciliations are provided are not shown in the quantitative reconciliation.
Total Cash Costs per Ounce of Gold Produced and Minesite Costs per Tonne
Total Cash Costs per Ounce
Total cash costs per ounce is calculated on a per ounce of gold produced basis and is reported either on a by-product basis (deducting the impact of by-product metals from production costs to isolate the cost of producing an ounce of gold) and, where indicated, on a co-product basis (without deducting the impact of by-product metals). Total cash costs per ounce on a by-product basis are calculated by adjusting production costs as recorded in the First Quarter Financial Statements for (i) the impact of by-products, (ii) inventory production costs, (iii) the impact of purchase price allocation in connection with mergers and acquisitions on inventory accounting, (iv) realized gains and losses on hedges of production costs, (v) in-kind royalty costs, and (vi) smelting, refining and marketing charges and then dividing by the number of ounces of gold produced. For periods commencing on or after January 1, 2026, the Company also adjusts production costs for the NTI Payment (as discussed further below), which adjustment only affects this non-GAAP measure only insofar as the measure includes costs from Meadowbank (that is, for Meadowbank, the Nunavut region and the consolidated Company). The Company's calculation of total cash costs per ounce for other mines and regions that do not include Meadowbank are not affected by this change.
The NTI Payment is the payment to Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. ("NTI") under the Company's mineral production lease in respect of the Amaruq mine at Meadowbank, which is a royalty based on net profits, subject to a minimum profit margin ("NTI Payment"). NTI is the body that represents the Inuit of Nunavut under the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement and holds the subsurface mineral rights on certain parcels of Inuit owned land, including at the Amaruq mine. The royalty payments under the mining leases with NTI are based on net profits at the mine, subject to a cap on allowable costs as a percentage of gross revenue. At mines located on lands in Nunavut where the subsurface mineral rights are not held by NTI (whether or not on Inuit owned lands), the Crown holds the subsurface mineral rights and imposes a net profits royalty (the "Crown royalty") under the Nunavut Mining Regulations (the "NMR"). The Company does not include the Crown royalty in its calculations of total cash costs per ounce and certain other of its non-GAAP measures as the Company classifies these costs as an income tax for financial statement purposes in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards and income taxes are generally excluded from the calculation of such non-GAAP measures. The Crown royalty is not applicable where NTI is the holder of the subsurface mineral rights. Where NTI is holder of the subsurface mineral rights, the Company instead is required to make the payment under the mining leases with NTI, which the Company views as having similar characteristics to the payments under the Crown royalty. Accordingly, to ensure comparability across the Company's mines in Nunavut, the Company revised its calculation of such non-GAAP measures to also adjust for the NTI Payment where applicable. In this news release, total cash costs per ounce for periods that commenced prior to January 1, 2026 have been calculated using this revised methodology.
Investors should note that total cash costs per ounce are not reflective of all cash expenditures, as they do not include income tax payments, interest costs or dividend payments. Total cash costs per ounce on a co-product basis is calculated in the same manner as the total cash costs per ounce on a by-product basis, except that the impact of by-product metals is not deducted. Accordingly, the calculation of total cash costs per ounce on a co-product basis does not reflect a reduction in production costs or smelting, refining and marketing charges associated with the production of by-product metals.
Total cash costs per ounce is intended to provide investors information about the cash-generating capabilities of the Company's mining operations. Management also uses these measures to, and believes they are helpful to investors so investors can, understand and monitor the performance of the Company's mining operations. The Company believes that total cash costs per ounce is useful to help investors understand the costs associated with producing gold and the economics of gold mining. As market prices for gold are quoted on a per ounce basis, using the total cash costs per ounce on a by-product basis measure allows management and investors to assess a mine's cash-generating capabilities at various gold prices. Management is aware, and investors should note, that these per ounce measures of performance can be affected by fluctuations in exchange rates and, in the case of total cash costs per ounce of gold produced on a by-product basis, by-product metal prices. Management compensates for these inherent limitations by using, and investors should also consider using, these measures in conjunction with data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards and minesite costs per tonne as these measures are not necessarily indicative of operating costs or cash flow measures prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards. Management also performs sensitivity analyses in order to quantify the effects of fluctuating metal prices and exchange rates.
Agnico Eagle's primary business is gold production and the focus of its current operations and future development is on maximizing returns from gold production, with other metal production being incidental to the gold production process. Accordingly, all metals other than gold are considered by-products.
In this news release, unless otherwise indicated, total cash costs per ounce is reported on a by-product basis. Total cash costs per ounce is reported on a by-product basis because (i) gold is the Company's primary product and source of substantially all its revenues, (ii) the Company mines ore, which may contain gold, silver, zinc, copper and other metals, and the Company believes that isolating the cost of producing gold is a more meaningful measure of operating performance, (iii) it is a method used by management and the Board to monitor operations, and (iv) many other gold producers disclose similar measures on a by-product rather than a co-product basis.
Minesite Costs per Tonne
Minesite costs per tonne are calculated by adjusting production costs as recorded in the First Quarter Financial Statements for (i) inventory production costs, (ii) in-kind royalty costs, and (iii) smelting, refining and marketing charges, and then dividing by tonnage of ore processed. For periods commencing on or after January 1, 2026, the Company also adjusts production costs for the NTI Payment (as discussed above in " Total Cash Costs per Ounce "), which adjustment only affects minesite costs per tonne at Meadowbank and for the Nunavut region. The Company's calculation of minesite costs per tonne for other mines and regions other than the Nunavut region are not affected by this change. In this news release, minesite costs for periods that commenced prior to January 1, 2026 have been calculated using this revised methodology.
As the total cash costs per ounce can be affected by fluctuations in by-product metal prices and foreign exchange rates, management believes that minesite costs per tonne is useful to investors in providing additional information regarding the performance of mining operations, eliminating the impact of varying production levels. Management also uses this measure to determine the economic viability of mining blocks. As each mining block is evaluated based on the net realizable value of each tonne mined, in order to be economically viable the estimated revenue on a per tonne basis must be in excess of the minesite costs per tonne. For the reasons noted above in respect of revisions to the composition of total cash costs per ounce, for the purposes of calculating this non-GAAP measure, the Company now adjusts production costs for the amount of the NTI Payment. The Company believes that this revision is helpful to both management and investors as it better reflects the cost performance at the Amaruq mine at Meadowbank and makes the reported measure more comparable across all of the Company's mines. Management is aware, and investors should note, that this per tonne measure of performance can be affected by fluctuations in processing levels. This inherent limitation may be partially mitigated by using this measure in conjunction with production costs and other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
The following table sets out the production costs per minesite for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025, as presented in the First Quarter Financial Statements in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
Total Production Costs by Mine | |||
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
(thousands of United States dollars) | 2026 | 2025 | |
LaRonde | 88,008 | 86,644 | |
Canadian Malartic | 129,946 | 119,289 | |
Goldex | 39,999 | 34,656 | |
Quebec | 257,953 | 240,589 | |
Detour Lake | 168,379 | 134,946 | |
Macassa | 72,465 | 49,826 | |
Ontario | 240,844 | 184,772 | |
Meliadine | 93,559 | 83,822 | |
Meadowbank | 183,615 | 126,967 | |
Nunavut | 277,174 | 210,789 | |
Fosterville | 45,493 | 33,040 | |
Australia | 45,493 | 33,040 | |
Kittila | 68,009 | 55,833 | |
Finland | 68,009 | 55,833 | |
Pinos Altos | 66,114 | 42,710 | |
Mexico | 66,114 | 42,710 | |
Production costs per the First Quarter Financial Statements | $ 955,587 | $ 767,733 | |
The following tables set out a reconciliation of total cash costs per ounce (on both a by-product basis and co-product basis) and minesite costs per tonne to production costs for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025, exclusive of amortization, as presented in the First Quarter Financial Statements in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
Reconciliation of Production Costs to Total Cash Costs per Ounce by Mine | ||||||||||
Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 | ||||||||||
(United States dollars in thousands, except per ounce measures or as otherwise noted) | ||||||||||
Mine | Payable
| Production
| Production
| Inventory
| Realized
| In-kind
| Smelting,
| Total cash
| Impact of
| Total cash
|
LaRonde | 81,596 | 88,008 | 1,079 | 17,164 | (323) | — | 3,271 | 1,325 | (24,299) | 1,027 |
Canadian Malartic | 166,216 | 129,946 | 782 | 4,777 | (705) | 37,309 | 945 | 1,036 | (6,462) | 998 |
Goldex | 29,372 | 39,999 | 1,362 | (1,852) | (119) | — | 1,052 | 1,331 | (12,217) | 915 |
Quebec | 277,184 | 257,953 | 931 | 20,089 | (1,147) | 37,309 | 5,268 | 1,153 | (42,978) | 998 |
Detour Lake | 177,019 | 168,379 | 951 | (9,663) | (1,032) | 17,369 | 921 | 994 | (3,531) | 974 |
Macassa | 55,593 | 72,465 | 1,303 | (7,071) | (303) | 5,929 | 59 | 1,279 | (1,264) | 1,256 |
Ontario | 232,612 | 240,844 | 1,035 | (16,734) | (1,335) | 23,298 | 980 | 1,062 | (4,795) | 1,041 |
Meliadine | 93,831 | 93,559 | 997 | 16,333 | (370) | — | 136 | 1,169 | (631) | 1,162 |
Meadowbank | 113,862 | 183,615 | 1,613 | (6,070) | (460) | (51,283) | 160 | 1,106 | (3,022) | 1,080 |
Nunavut | 207,693 | 277,174 | 1,335 | 10,263 | (830) | (51,283) | 296 | 1,134 | (3,653) | 1,117 |
Fosterville | 41,443 | 45,493 | 1,098 | 1,781 | (814) | — | 68 | 1,123 | — | 1,123 |
Australia | 41,443 | 45,493 | 1,098 | 1,781 | (814) | — | 68 | 1,123 | — | 1,123 |
Kittila | 48,527 | 68,009 | 1,401 | (4,052) | (11) | — | (27) | 1,317 | (187) | 1,313 |
Finland | 48,527 | 68,009 | 1,401 | (4,052) | (11) | — | (27) | 1,317 | (187) | 1,313 |
Pinos Altos | 17,650 | 66,114 | 3,746 | (7,244) | (876) | — | 1,100 | 3,348 | (18,313) | 2,311 |
Mexico | 17,650 | 66,114 | 3,746 | (7,244) | (876) | — | 1,100 | 3,348 | (18,313) | 2,311 |
Consolidated | 825,109 | 955,587 | 1,158 | 4,103 | (5,013) | 9,324 | 7,685 | 1,178 | (69,926) | 1,093 |
Notes: | |
(i) | Gold production for the period ended March 31, 2026 excludes 418 ounces of payable production of gold at La India and 76 ounces of payable production of gold at Creston Mascota , which were produced from residual leaching. |
(ii) | Under the Company's revenue recognition policy, revenue from contracts with customers is recognized upon the transfer of control over metals sold to the customer. As the total cash costs per ounce are calculated on a production basis, an inventory adjustment is made to reflect the portion of production not yet recognized as revenue. Included in inventory adjustments for Canadian Malartic for the three months ended March 31, 2026 is $3.6 million associated with the fair value allocated to inventory on Canadian Malartic as part of the purchase price allocation from the acquisition, on March 31, 2023, of the 50% of Canadian Malartic that Agnico Eagle did not then hold. |
(iii) | In‑kind royalty adjustments in respect of Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa related to in‑kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines, which are excluded from production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and added back in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce. NTI Payments are incurred solely at Meadowbank and are included in production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and subtracted from production costs in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce as described more fully above. For a discussion of NTI Payments, see " Total Cash Costs per Ounce ". |
Three Months Ended March 31, 2025 | ||||||||||
(United States dollars in thousands, except per ounce measures or as otherwise noted) | ||||||||||
Mine | Payable
| Production
| Production
| Inventory
| Realized
| In-kind
| Smelting,
| Total cash
| Impact of
| Total cash
|
LaRonde | 91,491 | 86,644 | 947 | (4,748) | 713 | — | 2,779 | 933 | (17,222) | 745 |
Canadian Malartic | 159,773 | 119,289 | 747 | 5,395 | 1,136 | 24,588 | 270 | 943 | (2,589) | 927 |
Goldex | 30,016 | 34,656 | 1,155 | 108 | 301 | — | 967 | 1,200 | (7,249) | 959 |
Quebec | 281,280 | 240,589 | 855 | 755 | 2,150 | 24,588 | 4,016 | 967 | (27,060) | 871 |
Detour Lake | 152,838 | 134,946 | 883 | (364) | 878 | 8,700 | 1,303 | 952 | (888) | 946 |
Macassa | 86,028 | 49,826 | 579 | 1,864 | 719 | 3,534 | 87 | 651 | (501) | 645 |
Ontario | 238,866 | 184,772 | 774 | 1,500 | 1,597 | 12,234 | 1,390 | 844 | (1,389) | 838 |
Meliadine | 98,512 | 83,822 | 851 | 5,859 | 892 | — | 84 | 920 | — | 920 |
Meadowbank | 140,126 | 126,967 | 906 | (1,663) | 1,158 | (7,418) | 35 | 850 | (750) | 844 |
Nunavut | 238,638 | 210,789 | 883 | 4,196 | 2,050 | (7,418) | 119 | 879 | (750) | 876 |
Fosterville | 43,615 | 33,040 | 758 | 2,520 | — | — | 16 | 816 | (114) | 813 |
Australia | 43,615 | 33,040 | 758 | 2,520 | — | — | 16 | 816 | (114) | 813 |
Kittila | 54,104 | 55,833 | 1,032 | (1,106) | 174 | — | (56) | 1,014 | (113) | 1,012 |
Finland | 54,104 | 55,833 | 1,032 | (1,106) | 174 | — | (56) | 1,014 | (113) | 1,012 |
Pinos Altos | 17,291 | 42,710 | 2,470 | 2,200 | 114 | — | 259 | 2,619 | (7,762) | 2,170 |
Mexico | 17,291 | 42,710 | 2,470 | 2,200 | 114 | — | 259 | 2,619 | (7,762) | 2,170 |
Consolidated | 873,794 | 767,733 | 879 | 10,065 | 6,085 | 29,404 | 5,744 | 938 | (37,188) | 895 |
Notes: | |
(i) | Gold production for the three months ended March 31, 2025 excludes 1,811 ounces of payable production of gold at La India and 25 ounces of payable production of gold at Creston Mascota, which were produced from residual leaching. |
(ii) | Under the Company's revenue recognition policy, revenue from contracts with customers is recognized upon the transfer of control over metals sold to the customer. As the total cash costs per ounce are calculated on a production basis, an inventory adjustment is made to reflect the portion of production not yet recognized as revenue. Included in inventory adjustments for Canadian Malartic for the three months ended March 31, 2025 is $1.1 million associated with the fair value allocated to inventory on Canadian Malartic as part of the purchase price allocation from the acquisition, on March 31, 2023, of the 50% of Canadian Malartic that Agnico Eagle did not then hold. |
(iii) | In‑kind royalty adjustments in respect of Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa related to in‑kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines, which are excluded from production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and added back in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce. NTI Payments are incurred solely at Meadowbank and are included in production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and subtracted from production costs in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce as described more fully above. For a discussion of NTI Payments, see " Total Cash Costs per Ounce ". |
Reconciliation of Production Costs to Minesite Costs per Tonne by Mine | ||||||||
Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 | ||||||||
(thousands, except per tonne measures or as otherwise noted) | ||||||||
Mine | Tonnes of
| Production
| Production
| Local
| Inventory
| In-kind
| Smelting,
| Local
|
LaRonde | 776 | $ 88,008 | C$ 121,027 | C$ 156 | C$ 23,633 | C$ — | C$ (9,224) | C$ 175 |
Canadian Malartic | 4,707 | $ 129,946 | C$ 178,822 | C$ 38 | C$ 1,444 | C$ 51,224 | C$ 4,986 | C$ 50 |
Goldex | 813 | $ 39,999 | C$ 55,053 | C$ 68 | C$ (2,653) | C$ — | C$ — | C$ 64 |
Quebec | 6,296 | $ 257,953 | C$ 354,902 | C$ 56 | C$ 22,424 | C$ 51,224 | C$ (4,238) | C$ 67 |
Detour Lake | 6,748 | $ 168,379 | C$ 231,062 | C$ 34 | C$ (13,326) | C$ 23,834 | C$ — | C$ 36 |
Macassa | 149 | $ 72,465 | C$ 99,773 | C$ 670 | C$ (9,684) | C$ 8,208 | C$ — | C$ 660 |
Ontario | 6,897 | $ 240,844 | C$ 330,835 | C$ 48 | C$ (23,010) | C$ 32,042 | C$ — | C$ 49 |
Meliadine | 558 | $ 93,559 | C$ 128,710 | C$ 231 | C$ 22,173 | C$ — | C$ — | C$ 270 |
Meadowbank | 1,099 | $ 183,615 | C$ 252,761 | C$ 230 | C$ (8,366) | C$ (70,816) | C$ — | C$ 158 |
Nunavut | 1,657 | $ 277,174 | C$ 381,471 | C$ 230 | C$ 13,807 | C$ (70,816) | C$ — | C$ 196 |
Fosterville | 216 | $ 45,493 | A$ 66,470 | A$ 308 | A$ 1,871 | A$ — | A$ — | A$ 316 |
Australia | 216 | $ 45,493 | A$ 66,470 | A$ 308 | A$ 1,871 | A$ — | A$ — | A$ 316 |
Kittila | 448 | $ 68,009 | € 57,890 | € 129 | € (3,365) | € — | € — | € 122 |
Finland | 448 | $ 68,009 | € 57,890 | € 129 | € (3,365) | € — | € — | € 122 |
Pinos Altos | 427 | $ 66,114 | $ 66,114 | $ 155 | $ (8,119) | $ — | $ — | $ 136 |
Mexico | 427 | $ 66,114 | $ 66,114 | $ 155 | $ (8,119) | $ — | $ — | $ 136 |
Notes: | |
(i) | This inventory adjustment reflects production costs associated with the portion of production still in inventory. Included in inventory adjustments for Canadian Malartic for the three months ended March 31, 2026 is C$5.0 million associated with the fair value allocated to inventory on Canadian Malartic as part of the purchase price allocation from the acquisition, on March 31, 2023, of the 50% of Canadian Malartic that Agnico Eagle did not then hold. |
(ii) | In‑kind royalty adjustments in respect of Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa related to in‑kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines, which are excluded from production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and added back in the calculation of minesite costs per tonne. NTI Payments are incurred solely at Meadowbank and are included in production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and subtracted from production costs in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce as described more fully above. For a discussion of NTI Payments, see " Minesite Costs per Tonne ". |
Three Months Ended March 31, 2025 | ||||||||
(thousands, except per tonne measures or as otherwise noted) | ||||||||
Mine | Tonnes of
| Production
| Production
| Production
| Inventory
| In-kind
| Smelting,
| Minesite
|
LaRonde | 675 | $ 86,644 | C$ 123,759 | C$ 183 | C$ (6,151) | C$ — | C$ (6,147) | C$ 165 |
Canadian Malartic | 4,865 | $ 119,289 | C$ 169,263 | C$ 35 | C$ 7,950 | C$ 35,400 | C$ — | C$ 44 |
Goldex | 792 | $ 34,656 | C$ 49,499 | C$ 63 | C$ 331 | C$ — | C$ — | C$ 63 |
Quebec | 6,332 | $ 240,589 | C$ 342,521 | C$ 54 | C$ 2,130 | C$ 35,400 | C$(6,147) | C$ 59 |
Detour Lake | 6,630 | $ 134,946 | C$ 191,633 | C$ 29 | C$ 13 | C$ 12,555 | C$ — | C$ 31 |
Macassa | 148 | $ 49,826 | C$ 71,459 | C$ 483 | C$ 2,692 | C$ 5,108 | C$ — | C$ 536 |
Ontario | 6,778 | $ 184,772 | C$ 263,092 | C$ 39 | C$ 2,705 | C$ 17,663 | C$ — | C$ 42 |
Meliadine | 558 | $ 83,822 | C$ 118,780 | C$ 213 | C$ 8,727 | C$ — | C$ — | C$ 229 |
Meadowbank | 1,037 | $ 126,967 | C$ 179,936 | C$ 174 | C$ (2,425) | C$ (10,697) | C$ — | C$ 161 |
Nunavut | 1,595 | $ 210,789 | C$ 298,716 | C$ 187 | C$ 6,302 | C$ (10,697) | C$ — | C$ 185 |
Fosterville | 163 | $ 33,040 | A$ 51,973 | A$ 319 | A$ 4,181 | A$ — | A$ — | A$ 345 |
Australia | 163 | $ 33,040 | A$ 51,973 | A$ 319 | A$ 4,181 | A$ — | A$ — | A$ 345 |
Kittila | 522 | $ 55,833 | € 53,143 | € 102 | € (1,362) | € — | € — | € 99 |
Finland | 522 | $ 55,833 | € 53,143 | € 102 | € (1,362) | € — | € — | € 99 |
Pinos Altos | 381 | $ 42,710 | $ 42,710 | $ 112 | $ 2,314 | $ — | $ — | $ 118 |
Mexico | 381 | $ 42,710 | $ 42,710 | $ 112 | $ 2,314 | $ — | $ — | $ 118 |
Notes: | |
(i) | This inventory adjustment reflects production costs associated with the portion of production still in inventory. Included in inventory adjustments for Canadian Malartic for the three months ended March 31, 2025 is C$1.5 million associated with the fair value allocated to inventory on Canadian Malartic as part of the purchase price allocation from the acquisition, on March 31, 2023, of the 50% of Canadian Malartic that Agnico Eagle did not then hold. |
(ii) | In‑kind royalty adjustments in respect of Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa related to in‑kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines, which are excluded from production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and added back in the calculation of minesite costs per tonne. NTI Payments are incurred solely at Meadowbank and are included in production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and subtracted from production costs in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce as described more fully above. For a discussion of NTI Payments, see " Minesite Costs per Tonne ". |
All-in sustaining costs per ounce
All-in sustaining costs per ounce (also referred to as "AISC per ounce") on a by-product basis is calculated as the aggregate of (i) total cash costs on a by-product basis, (ii) sustaining capital expenditures (including capitalized exploration), (iii) general and administrative expenses (including stock option expense), (iv) lease payments related to sustaining assets and (v) reclamation expenses, each as measured on a per ounce of production basis. These additional costs reflect the additional expenditures that are required to be made to maintain current production levels. AISC per ounce on a co-product basis is calculated in the same manner as AISC per ounce on a by-product basis, except that the total cash costs on a co-product basis are used, meaning the impact of by-product metals is not deducted. Investors should note that AISC per ounce is not reflective of all cash expenditures as it does not include income tax payments, interest costs or dividend payments, nor does it include non-cash expenditures, such as depreciation and amortization. In this news release, unless otherwise indicated, all-in sustaining costs per ounce is reported on a by-product basis (see "Total Cash Costs per Ounce" for a discussion of regarding the Company's use of by-product basis reporting). For periods commencing on or after January 1, 2026, the Company revised the composition of certain of its non-GAAP performance measures, including "all-in sustaining costs per ounce", to adjust for the NTI Payments, that is, payments made to NTI under the Company's mineral production leases in respect of the Amaruq mine at Meadowbank. This revised composition aligns with changes made to the calculation of "total cash costs per ounce", discussed above in " Total Cash Costs per Ounce ". For the reasons outlined above in respect of the change to the composition of "total cash costs per ounce", the Company believes that this revision to the composition of AISC per ounce is helpful to both management and investors as it better reflects the cost performance at the Amaruq mine at Meadowbank and conforms the calculations of costs used across all of the Company's mines.
Management believes that AISC per ounce is useful to investors as it reflects total sustaining expenditures of producing and selling an ounce of gold while maintaining current operations and, as such, provides useful information about operating performance. Management is aware, and investors should note, that these per ounce measures of performance can be affected by fluctuations in foreign exchange rates and, in the case of AISC per ounce on a by-product basis, by-product metal prices. Management compensates for these inherent limitations by using, and investors should also consider using, these measures in conjunction with data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards and minesite costs per tonne, as this measure is not necessarily indicative of operating costs or cash flow measures prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
The Company follows the guidance on calculation of AISC per ounce released by the World Gold Council ("WGC") in 2018, except in aspect of its treatment of the NTI Payment at Meadowbank. As discussed above, the Company views the NTI Payments as having similar characteristics to the Crown royalty, which is treated as income tax under IFRS Accounting Standards and therefore excluded from the Company's AISC calculations. The WGC is a non-regulatory market development organization for the gold industry that has worked closely with its member companies to develop guidance in respect of relevant non-GAAP measures. Notwithstanding the Company's adoption of the WGC's guidance, AISC per ounce reported by the Company may not be comparable to data reported by other gold mining companies.
The following table sets out a reconciliation of production costs to all-in sustaining costs per ounce for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025 on both a by-product basis (deducting the impact of by-product metals from production costs) and a co-product basis (without deducting the impact of by-product metals from production costs).
(UnitedStates dollars per ounce, except where noted) | Three Months Ended March 31, | ||
2026 | 2025 | ||
Production costs per the First Quarter Financial Statements (thousands of United States dollars) | $ 955,587 | $ 767,733 | |
Gold production (ounces) (i) | 825,109 | 873,794 | |
Production costs per ounce | $ 1,158 | $ 879 | |
Adjustments: | |||
Inventory adjustments (ii) | 6 | 11 | |
In-kind royalty and NTI Payments (iii) | 11 | 34 | |
Realized gains and losses on hedges of production costs | (6) | 7 | |
Smelting, refining, and marketing charges | 9 | 7 | |
Total cash costs per ounce (co-product basis) | $ 1,178 | $ 938 | |
Impact of by-product metals | (85) | (43) | |
Total cash costs per ounce (by-product basis) | $ 1,093 | $ 895 | |
Adjustments: | |||
Sustaining capital expenditures (including capitalized exploration) | 243 | 196 | |
General and administrative expenses (including stock option expense) | 94 | 69 | |
Non-cash reclamation provision and sustaining leases (iv) | 53 | 15 | |
All-in sustaining costs per ounce (by-product basis) | $ 1,483 | $ 1,175 | |
Impact of by-product metals | 85 | 43 | |
All-in sustaining costs per ounce (co-product basis) | $ 1,568 | $ 1,218 | |
Notes: |
(i) Gold production for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and 2025 excludes 418 ounces and 1,811 ounces of payable production of gold at La India and 76 ounces and 25 ounces of payable production at Creston Mascota, respectively, which were produced from residual leaching |
(ii) Under the Company's revenue recognition policy, revenue from contracts with customers is recognized upon the transfer of control over metals sold to the customer. As the total cash costs per ounce of gold produced are calculated on a production basis, an inventory adjustment is made to reflect the portion of production not yet recognized as revenue. Included in inventory adjustments for Canadian Malartic is $3.6 million and $1.1 million for the three months ended March 31 2026 and 2025 respectively, associated with the fair value allocated to inventory on Canadian Malartic as part of the purchase price allocation from the acquisition, on March 31, 2023, of the 50% of Canadian Malartic that Agnico Eagle did not then hold |
(iii) In‑kind royalty adjustments in respect of Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa related to in‑kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines, which are excluded from production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and added back in the calculation of all-in sustaining costs per ounce. NTI Payments are incurred solely at Meadowbank and are included in production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and subtracted from production costs in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce as described more fully above. For a discussion of NTI Payments, see " Total Cash Costs per Ounce " |
(iv) Sustaining leases are lease payments related to sustaining assets |
Adjusted net income
Adjusted net income is calculated by adjusting the net income as recorded in the First Quarter Financial Statements for the effects of certain items that the Company believes are not reflective of the Company's underlying performance for the reporting period. Adjusted net income is calculated by adjusting net income for certain non-recurring, unusual and other items such as foreign currency translation gains or losses, realized and unrealized gains or losses on derivative financial instruments, severance, transaction costs related to acquisitions, revaluation gains and losses, environmental remediation charges, gains or losses on the disposal of assets, purchase price allocations to inventory, debt extinguishment costs, impairment loss charges and reversals, gains and losses on the sale of equity securities, retroactive payments, self insurance losses, gains and losses on the sale of non-strategic properties, multi-year donations, disposal of supplies inventory at non-operating sites, and income and mining taxes adjustments. Adjusted net income per share is calculated by dividing adjusted net income by the weighted average number of shares outstanding on a basic and diluted basis.
The Company believes that these generally accepted industry measures are useful to investors in that they allow for the evaluation of the results of continuing operations and in making comparisons between periods. Adjusted net income and adjusted net income per share are intended to provide investors with information about the Company's continuing income generating capabilities from its core mining business, excluding the above adjustments, which the Company believes are not reflective of operational performance. Management uses this measure to, and believes it is useful to investors so they can, understand and monitor for the operating performance of the Company in conjunction with other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
The following table sets out the calculation of adjusted net income for the three months ended March 31, 2026, and March 31, 2025.
Three Months Ended
| |||
(thousands) | 2026 | 2025 | |
Net income for the period | $ 1,695,461 | $ 814,731 | |
Foreign currency translation gain | (733) | (60) | |
Gain on derivative financial instruments | (4,700) | (68,859) | |
Environmental remediation | 13,970 | 7,730 | |
Net loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment | 10,239 | 5,646 | |
Purchase price allocation to inventory (i) | (3,641) | 1,068 | |
Impairment loss (ii) | — | 10,554 | |
Income and mining taxes adjustments (iii) | (4,840) | (703) | |
Adjusted net income for the period | $ 1,705,756 | $ 770,107 | |
Notes: |
(i) As part of the purchase price allocation in a business combination, the Company is required to determine the fair value of net assets acquired. The fair value of inventory acquired is estimated based on the selling cost less costs to be incurred plus a profit margin on those costs resulting in a fair value adjustment to the carrying value of inventories acquired. These non-cash fair value adjustments which affected the cost of inventory sold during the period and are not representative of ongoing operations, were removed from net income in the calculation of adjusted net income |
(ii) Relates to the Company's ownership percentage of an impairment loss recorded by an associate |
(iii) Income and mining taxes adjustments reflect items such as foreign currency translation recorded to the income and mining taxes expense, the impact of income and mining taxes on adjusted items, recognition of previously unrecognized capital losses, the result of income and mining taxes audits, impact of tax law changes and adjustments to prior period tax filings |
EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA
EBITDA is calculated by adjusting net income for finance costs, amortization of property, plant and mine development and income and mining tax expense line items as reported in the First Quarter Financial Statements.
Adjusted EBITDA removes the effects of certain items that the Company believes are not reflective of the Company's underlying performance for the reporting period. Adjusted EBITDA is calculated by adjusting the EBITDA calculation for certain non-recurring, unusual and other items such as foreign currency translation gains or losses, realized and unrealized gains or losses on derivative financial instruments, severance, non-recurring, unusual and other transaction costs related to acquisitions, revaluation gains and losses, environmental remediation, gains or losses on the disposal of assets, purchase price allocations to inventory, debt extinguishment costs, impairment loss charges and reversals, gains and losses on the sale of equity securities, retroactive payments, self insurance losses, gains and losses on the sale of non-strategic properties, multi-year donations, and disposal of supplies inventory at non-operating sites.
The Company believes that these generally accepted industry measures are useful in that they allow for the evaluation of the cash-generating capability of the Company to fund its working capital, capital expenditure and debt repayments. EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA are intended to provide investors with information about the Company's continuing cash-generating capability from its core mining business, excluding the above adjustments, which management believes are not reflective of operational performance. Management uses these measures to, and believes it is useful to investors so they can, understand and monitor the cash-generating capability of the Company in conjunction with other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
The following table sets out the calculation of EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025.
Three Months Ended
| |||
(thousands) | 2026 | 2025 | |
Net income for the period | $ 1,695,461 | $ 814,731 | |
Finance costs | 15,756 | 22,444 | |
Amortization of property, plant and mine development | 420,266 | 416,800 | |
Income and mining tax expense | 864,163 | 379,840 | |
EBITDA | 2,995,646 | 1,633,815 | |
Foreign currency translation gain | (733) | (60) | |
Gain on derivative financial instruments | (4,700) | (68,859) | |
Environmental remediation | 13,970 | 7,730 | |
Net loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment | 10,239 | 5,646 | |
Purchase price allocation to inventory (i) | (3,641) | 1,068 | |
Impairment loss (ii) | — | 10,554 | |
Adjusted EBITDA | $ 3,010,781 | $ 1,589,894 | |
Notes: |
(i) As part of the purchase price allocation in a business combination, the Company is required to determine the fair value of net assets acquired. The fair value of inventory acquired is estimated based on the selling cost less costs to be incurred plus a profit margin on those costs resulting in a fair value adjustment to the carrying value of inventories acquired. These non-cash fair value adjustments which affected the cost of inventory sold during the period and are not representative of ongoing operations, were removed from net income in the calculation of adjusted net income |
(ii) Relates to the Company's ownership percentage of an impairment loss recorded by an associate |
Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital and its per share ratio
Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital is calculated by adjusting the cash provided by operating activities as shown in the First Quarter Financial Statements for the effects of changes in non-cash components of working capital such as income taxes, inventories, other current assets, accounts payable and accrued liabilities and interest payable. The per share ratio is calculated by dividing cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital by the weighted average number of shares outstanding on a basic basis. The Company believes that changes in working capital can be volatile due to numerous factors, including the timing of payments. Management uses these measures to, and believes they are useful to investors so they can, assess the underlying operating cash flow performance and future operating cash flow generating capabilities of the Company in conjunction with other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards. A reconciliation of these measures to the nearest IFRS Accounting Standards measure is provided below.
Free cash flow and free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital
Free cash flow is calculated by deducting additions to property, plant and mine development from the cash provided by operating activities line item as recorded in the First Quarter Financial Statements.
Free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital is calculated by excluding items such as the effect of changes in non-cash components of working capital from free cash flow, which includes income taxes, inventory, other current assets, accounts payable and accrued liabilities and interest payable.
The Company believes that these generally accepted industry measures are useful in that they allow for the evaluation of the Company's ability to repay creditors and return cash to shareholders without relying on external sources of funding. Free cash flow and free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital also provide investors with information about the Company's financial position and its ability to generate cash to fund operational and capital requirements as well as return cash to shareholders. Management uses these measures in conjunction with other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards to, and believes it is useful to investors so they can, understand and monitor the cash-generating ability of the Company.
The following table sets out the calculation of free cash flow and free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025.
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
(thousands, except where noted) | 2026 | 2025 | |
Cash provided by operating activities | $ 1,345,868 | $ 1,044,246 | |
Additions to property, plant and mine development | (613,749) | (450,124) | |
Free cash flow | 732,119 | 594,122 | |
Changes in income taxes | 989,080 | 176,739 | |
Changes in inventory | (36,800) | (30,917) | |
Changes in other current assets | 11,014 | (31,390) | |
Changes in accounts payable and accrued liabilities | (77,800) | 50,712 | |
Free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital | $ 1,617,613 | $ 759,266 | |
Additions to property, plant and mine development | 613,749 | 450,124 | |
Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital | $ 2,231,362 | $ 1,209,390 | |
Cash provided by operating activities per share - basic | $ 2.69 | $ 2.08 | |
Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital per share - basic | $ 4.46 | $ 2.41 | |
Free cash flow per share - basic | $ 1.46 | $ 1.18 | |
Free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital per share - basic | $ 3.23 | $ 1.51 |
Operating margin
Operating margin is calculated by deducting production costs from revenue from mining operations. In order to reconcile operating margin to net income as recorded in the First Quarter Financial Statements, the Company adds the following items to the operating margin: amortization of property, plant and mine development; exploration and corporate development expenses; general and administrative expenses; finance costs; gain (loss) on derivative financial instruments; foreign currency translation (gain) loss; care and maintenance expenses; other income and expenses; income and mining taxes expense; revaluation gain and impairment losses (reversals). The Company believes that operating margin is a helpful measure to investors as it reflects the operating performance of its individual mines associated with the ongoing production and sale of gold and by-product metals without allocating Company-wide overhead, such as amortization of property, plant and mine development, exploration and corporate development expenses, general and administrative expenses, finance costs, gains and losses on derivative financial instruments, foreign currency translation gains and losses, care and maintenance expenses, other income and expenses and income and mining taxes expense. Management uses this measure internally to plan and forecast future operating results. Management believes this measure is helpful to investors as it provides them with additional information about the Company's underlying operating results, though it should be evaluated in conjunction with other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
The following table sets out the calculation of operating margin for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025.
Three Months Ended
| |||
(thousands) | 2026 | 2025 | |
Net income for the period | $ 1,695,461 | $ 814,731 | |
Amortization of property, plant and mine development | 420,266 | 416,800 | |
Exploration and corporate development | 52,556 | 41,805 | |
General and administrative | 77,850 | 60,709 | |
Finance costs | 15,756 | 22,444 | |
Gain on derivative financial instruments | (4,700) | (68,859) | |
Foreign currency translation gain | (733) | (60) | |
Care and maintenance | 22,596 | 13,901 | |
Other income and expenses | 787 | 19,204 | |
Income and mining taxes expense | 864,163 | 379,840 | |
Operating margin | $ 3,144,002 | $ 1,700,515 |
Capital expenditures
Capital expenditures are calculated by deducting working capital adjustments from additions to property, plant and mine development per the First Quarter Financial Statements.
Capital expenditures are classified into sustaining capital expenditures, sustaining capitalized exploration, development capital expenditures and development capitalized exploration. Sustaining capital expenditures and sustaining capitalized exploration are expenditures incurred during the production phase to sustain and maintain existing assets so they can achieve constant expected levels of production from which the Company will derive economic benefits. Sustaining capital expenditures and sustaining capitalized exploration include expenditure for assets to retain their existing productive capacity as well as to enhance performance and reliability of the operations. Development capital expenditures and development capitalized exploration represent the spending at new projects and/or expenditures at existing operations that are undertaken with the intention to increase production levels or mine life above the current plans. Management uses these measures in the capital allocation process and to assess the effectiveness of its investments. Management believes these measures are useful so investors can assess the purpose and effectiveness of the capital expenditures split between sustaining and development in each reporting period. The classification between sustaining and development capital expenditures does not have a standardized definition in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards and other companies may classify expenditures in a different manner.
The following table sets out a reconciliation of sustaining capital expenditures, sustaining capitalized exploration, development capital expenditures and development capitalized exploration to the additions to property, plant and mine development per the First Quarter Financial Statements for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025.
(thousands) | Three Months Ended
| ||
2026 | 2025 | ||
Sustaining capital expenditures | $ 196,592 | $ 168,076 | |
Sustaining capitalized exploration | 5,387 | 4,448 | |
Development capital expenditures | 292,290 | 186,224 | |
Development capitalized exploration | 79,341 | 60,504 | |
Total Capital Expenditures | $ 573,610 | $ 419,252 | |
Working capital adjustments | 40,139 | 30,872 | |
Additions to property, plant and mine development per the First Quarter Financial Statements | $ 613,749 | $ 450,124 | |
Net cash
Net cash is calculated by adjusting the total of the current portion of long-term debt and non-current long-term debt for deferred financing costs, less cash and cash equivalents, as recorded in the First Quarter Financial Statements. Management believes that net cash is a useful measure to help investors assess the Company's overall liquidity position, ability to meet its financial obligations, fund capital expenditures, advance growth projects and return capital to shareholders after considering outstanding debt obligations.
The following table sets out a reconciliation of long-term debt per the First Quarter Financial Statements to net cash as at March 31, 2026, and December 31, 2025.
As at | As at | ||
(thousands) | Mar 31, 2026 | Dec 31, 2025 | |
Long-term debt | $ (196,548) | $ (196,271) | |
Cash and cash equivalents | 3,111,869 | 2,866,053 | |
Net cash | $ 2,915,321 | $ 2,669,782 |
Forward-Looking Non-GAAP Measures
This news release contains information regarding estimated future total cash costs per ounce, minesite costs per tonne and AISC per ounce. The estimates are based upon the total cash costs per ounce, minesite costs per tonne and AISC per ounce that the Company expects to incur to mine gold at its mining operations and do not include certain costs that will vary over time as each project is developed and mined. It is therefore not practicable to reconcile these forward-looking non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable IFRS Accounting Standards measure.
Forward-Looking Statements
The information in this news release has been prepared as at April 30, 2026. Certain statements contained in this news release constitute "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and "forward-looking information" under the provisions of Canadian provincial securities laws and are referred to herein as "forward-looking statements". All statements, other than statements of historical fact, that address circumstances, events, activities or developments that could, or may or will occur are forward-looking statements. When used in this news release, the words "achieve", "aim", "anticipate", "commit", "could", "envisions", "estimate", "expect", "forecast", "future", "guide", "objective", "plan", "potential", "schedule", "target", "track", "will", and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Such statements include the Company's forward-looking guidance, including metal production (including the weighting thereof within 2026), estimated ore grades, recovery rates, project timelines, drilling targets or results, life of mine estimates, total cash costs per ounce, AISC per ounce, other expenses and cash flows; the potential for additional gold production at the Company's sites, including the potential to increase annual gold production by 20% to 30% over the next decade, exceeding four million ounces by the early 2030s; the estimated timing and conclusions of the Company's studies and evaluations; the methods by which ore will be extracted or processed; the Company's plans at Detour Lake underground, Upper Beaver, Odyssey, Hope Bay and San Nicolás, including the approval, timing, funding, completion and commissioning thereof and the commencement of production therefrom; statements concerning the Company's "fill-the-mill" strategy at Canadian Malartic; statements concerning the proposed transactions with Rupert and Aurion, and the acquisition of 70% of Fingold Ventures Ltd., including the potential benefits thereof; statements concerning other expansion projects, recovery rates, mill throughput, optimization efforts and projected exploration, including costs and other estimates upon which such projections are based; timing and amounts of capital expenditures, other expenditures and other cash needs, and expectations as to the funding thereof; estimates of future mineral reserves, mineral resources, mineral production and sales; the projected development of certain ore deposits, including estimates of exploration, development, production, closure and other capital expenditures and estimates of the timing of such exploration, development, production and closure or decisions with respect to such exploration, development, production and closure; estimates of mineral reserves and mineral resources and the effect of drill results and studies on future mineral reserves and mineral resources; the Company's ability to obtain the necessary permits and authorizations in connection with its proposed or current exploration, development and mining operations, and the anticipated timing or submission or receipt thereof; future exploration; the anticipated timing of events with respect to the Company's mine sites; the Company's plans and strategies with respect to sustainability initiatives; the sufficiency of the Company's cash resources; the Company's plans with respect to hedging and the effectiveness of its hedging strategies and the economic impact thereof; future activity with respect to the Company's unsecured revolving bank credit facility and other indebtedness; future dividend amounts, record dates and payment dates; the effect of tariffs, trade restrictions and the effect of geopolitical events on the Company, whether through availability of inputs or inflation; plans with respect to activity under the NCIB and the renewal thereof, including the anticipated increase in the purchase limit; and anticipated trends with respect to the Company's operations, exploration and the funding thereof. Such statements reflect the Company's views as at the date of this news release and are subject to certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions, and undue reliance should not be placed on such statements. Forward-looking statements are necessarily based upon a number of factors and assumptions that, while considered reasonable by Agnico Eagle as of the date of such statements, are inherently subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies. The material factors and assumptions used in the preparation of the forward-looking statements contained herein, which may prove to be incorrect, include, but are not limited to, the assumptions set forth herein and in management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025 (the "2025 MD&A") and the Company's Annual Information Form (the "AIF") for the year ended December 31, 2025 filed with Canadian securities regulators and that are included in its Annual Report on Form 40-F for the year ended December 31, 2025 (the "Form 40-F") filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") as well as: that there are no significant disruptions affecting operations; that production, permitting, development, expansion and the ramp-up of operations at each of Agnico Eagle's properties proceeds on a basis consistent with current expectations and plans; that the Company's plans for its mining operations are not changed or amended in a material way; that the relevant metal prices, foreign exchange rates and prices for key mining and construction inputs (including labour and electricity) will be consistent with Agnico Eagle's expectations; that the effect of tariffs or trade disputes will not materially affect the price or availability of the inputs the Company uses at its operations; that Agnico Eagle's current estimates of mineral reserves, mineral resources, mineral grades and metal recovery are accurate; that there are no material delays in the timing for completion of ongoing growth projects; that seismic activity at the Company's operations at LaRonde, Goldex, Fosterville and other properties is as expected by the Company and that the Company's efforts to mitigate its effect on mining operations, including with respect to community relations, are successful; that the Company's current plans to address climate change and reduce greenhouse gas emissions are successful; that the Company's current plans to optimize production are successful; that there are no material variations in the current tax and regulatory environment; that governments, the Company or others do not take measures in response to pandemics or other health emergencies or otherwise that, individually or in the aggregate, materially affect the Company's ability to operate its business or its productivity; and that measures taken relating to, or other effects of, pandemics or other health emergencies do not affect the Company's ability to obtain necessary supplies and deliver them to its mine sites. Many factors, known and unknown, could cause the actual results to be materially different from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such risks include, but are not limited to: the volatility of prices of gold and other metals; uncertainty of mineral reserves, mineral resources, mineral grades and mineral recovery estimates; uncertainty of future production, project development, capital expenditures and other costs; foreign exchange rate fluctuations; inflationary pressures; financing of additional capital requirements; cost of exploration and development programs; seismic activity at the Company's operations, including at LaRonde, Goldex and Fosterville; mining risks; community protests, including by Indigenous groups; risks associated with foreign operations; risks associated with joint ventures; governmental and environmental regulation; the volatility of the Company's stock price; risks associated with the Company's currency, fuel and by-product metal derivative strategies; the current interest rate environment; the potential for major economies to encounter a slowdown in economic activity or a recession; the potential for increased conflict or hostilities in various regions, including Europe, South America and the Middle East; and the extent and manner of communicable diseases or outbreaks, and measures taken by governments, the Company or others to attempt to mitigate the spread thereof may directly or indirectly affect the Company. For a more detailed discussion of such risks and other factors that may affect the Company's ability to achieve the expectations set forth in the forward-looking statements contained in this news release, see the AIF and 2025 MD&A filed on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and included in the Form 40-F filed on EDGAR at www.sec.gov , as well as the Company's other filings with the Canadian securities regulators and the SEC. Other than as required by law, the Company does not intend, and does not assume any obligation, to update these forward-looking statements.
Notes to Investors Regarding Certain Project Evaluations
The forecast parameters surrounding certain projects, including Detour Lake underground, Upper Beaver, Hope Bay and the "fill-the-mill" strategy at Canadian Malartic (Odyssey Shaft #1, Odyssey Shaft #2, Marban, Wasamac), were based on internal evaluations, which are preliminary in nature and include inferred mineral resources that are too speculative geologically to have economic considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as mineral reserves and there is no certainty that the forecast production amounts will be realized.
The basis for the internal evaluations and the qualifications and assumptions made by the qualified persons who undertook the internal evaluations are set out in this news release and the news releases dated June 29, 2024 for Detour Lake underground and dated July 31, 2024 for Upper Beaver. The results of the internal evaluations had no impact on the results of any pre-feasibility or feasibility study. An updated internal evaluation is expected in the second quarter of 2026 for Hope Bay, in the first quarter of 2027 for the "fill-the-mill" strategy at Canadian Malartic and in mid-2027 for Detour Lake and Upper Beaver.
Scientific and Technical Information
The scientific and technical information contained in this news release relating to Nunavut, Quebec and Finland operations has been approved by Dominique Girard, Eng., Executive Vice-President & Chief Operating Officer – Nunavut, Quebec & Europe; relating to Ontario, Australia and Mexico operations has been approved by Natasha Vaz, P.Eng., Executive Vice-President & Chief Operating Officer – Ontario, Australia & Mexico; and relating to exploration has been approved by Guy Gosselin, Eng. and P.Geo., Executive Vice-President, Exploration, each of whom is a "Qualified Person" for the purposes of the Canadian Securities Administrators' National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects ("NI 43-101").
Additional Information
Additional information about each of the Company's material mineral projects as at December 31, 2025, including information regarding data verification, key assumptions, parameters and methods used to estimate mineral reserves and mineral resources and the risks that could materially affect the development of the mineral reserves and mineral resources required by sections 3.2 and 3.3 and paragraphs 3.4(a), (c) and (d) of NI 43-101 can be found in the Company's AIF and 2025 MD&A filed on SEDAR+ and with the SEC on EDGAR and in the following technical reports filed on SEDAR+ in respect of the Company's material mineral properties: Detour Lake Operation, Ontario, Canada, NI 43-101 Technical Report (September 20, 2024); NI 43-101 Technical Report of the LaRonde complex in Quebec, Canada (March 24, 2023); NI 43-101 Technical Report Canadian Malartic Mine, Quebec, Canada (March 25, 2021); Technical Report on the Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves at Meadowbank Gold complex including the Amaruq Satellite Mine Development, Nunavut, Canada as at December 31, 2017 (February 14, 2018); and the Updated Technical Report on the Meliadine Gold Project, Nunavut, Canada (February 11, 2015).
APPENDIX A – EXPLORATION DETAILS
East Gouldie and Odyssey deposits at Odyssey mine
Drill hole | Deposit / zone | From
| To (metres) | Depth of midpoint below surface
| Estimated true width (metres) | Gold grade (g/t) (uncapped) | Gold grade
(capped)* |
MEX25-346WZB | East Gouldie | 2,034.5 | 2,056.2 | 1,909 | 21.0 | 2.0 | 2.0 |
MEX25-348ZA | East Gouldie | 1,875.1 | 1,905.6 | 1,711 | 22.6 | 1.7 | 1.7 |
UGEG-016-010 | East Gouldie | 777.5 | 795.0 | 869 | 14.3 | 2.6 | 2.6 |
UGEG-071-031 | East Gouldie | 641.0 | 665.5 | 1,057 | 24.2 | 2.8 | 2.8 |
UGEG-095-010 | East Gouldie | 160.0 | 177.2 | 999 | 14.7 | 3.0 | 3.0 |
UGEG-095-014 | East Gouldie | 159.0 | 170.4 | 1,061 | 10.3 | 5.5 | 5.5 |
and | East Gouldie | 283.0 | 293.6 | 1,153 | 9.8 | 5.8 | 5.8 |
and | East Gouldie | 315.4 | 322.2 | 1,175 | 6.3 | 5.1 | 5.1 |
and | East Gouldie | 327.9 | 345.4 | 1,187 | 15.8 | 3.0 | 3.0 |
UGEG-103-005 | East Gouldie | 131.0 | 168.4 | 1,089 | 36.0 | 6.9 | 6.7 |
including | 141.1 | 157.0 | 1,089 | 15.3 | 13.1 | 12.6 | |
MEX25-350Z | East Gouldie | 1,512.0 | 1,522.5 | 1,065 | 10.0 | 2.2 | 2.2 |
UGOD-051-017 | Odyssey internal | 495.0 | 535.0 | 884 | 40.0** | 1.9 | 1.9 |
UGOD-057-005 | Odyssey internal | 555.2 | 561.2 | 978 | 6.0** | 9.8 | 9.8 |
UGOD-057-012 | Odyssey internal | 538.5 | 551.4 | 1,017 | 12.9** | 7.1 | 6.1 |
including | 546.5 | 551.4 | 1,020 | 4.9** | 14.7 | 12.0 | |
and | Odyssey internal | 582.0 | 635.5 | 1,067 | 53.5** | 9.7 | 9.0 |
UGOD-057-013 | Odyssey internal | 669.5 | 681.0 | 1,118 | 11.5** | 4.6 | 4.1 |
including | 677.7 | 680.0 | 1,121 | 2.4** | 17.2 | 14.8 | |
and | Odyssey North | 700.5 | 726.6 | 1,149 | 19.7 | 3.1 | 3.1 |
including | 716.5 | 721.0 | 1,153 | 3.4 | 6.3 | 6.3 | |
UGOD-064-018 | Odyssey internal | 355.5 | 369.0 | 891 | 13.5** | 4.3 | 4.3 |
UGOD-064-019 | Odyssey internal | 397.8 | 425.4 | 992 | 27.6** | 2.8 | 2.8 |
including | 408.0 | 416.0 | 992 | 8.0** | 5.6 | 5.6 | |
and | Odyssey North | 507.5 | 518.0 | 1,077 | 10.5** | 2.1 | 2.1 |
and | Odyssey North | 524.0 | 534.5 | 1,091 | 10.5** | 2.1 | 2.1 |
*Results from East Gouldie and Odyssey deposits use a capping factor of 20 g/t gold. |
**Core length. True width undetermined. |
West Pit and West Extension zones at Detour Lake
Drill hole | Zone | From
| To (metres) | Depth of
| Estimated true width
| Gold grade
|
DLM25-1240 | West Extension | 1,089.0 | 1,092.5 | 922 | 3.1 | 10.0 |
DLM25-1243 | West Extension | 837.0 | 842.1 | 734 | 4.4 | 28.0 |
and | West Extension | 910.9 | 913.9 | 794 | 2.6 | 11.7 |
DLM25-1245 | West Extension | 592.5 | 604.0 | 497 | 10.1 | 10.7 |
including | 601.0 | 604.0 | 501 | 2.6 | 37.8 | |
DLM25-1246 | West Extension | 889.8 | 897.1 | 801 | 6.0 | 4.3 |
DLM25-1255 | West Extension | 774.0 | 805.3 | 669 | 27.4 | 2.6 |
DLM25-1274 | West Extension | 911.0 | 914.0 | 797 | 2.6 | 14.0 |
and | West Extension | 930.0 | 941.0 | 816 | 9.5 | 3.6 |
DLM25-1282AW | West Extension | 580.8 | 586.0 | 526 | 4.9 | 6.5 |
DLM25-1282AW1 | West Extension | 1,176.2 | 1,186.0 | 1,000 | 9.2 | 5.9 |
DLM26-1299 | West Pit | 99.0 | 102.0 | 84 | 2.5 | 14.0 |
and | West Pit | 215.4 | 231.7 | 187 | 14.1 | 8.9 |
including | 215.4 | 220.0 | 182 | 4.0 | 18.3 | |
and including | 226.8 | 231.7 | 191 | 4.2 | 11.1 | |
DLM26-1313 | West Pit | 237.0 | 264.0 | 210 | 23.2 | 2.9 |
including | 257.0 | 264.0 | 218 | 6.0 | 8.1 | |
and | West Pit | 278.5 | 288.9 | 238 | 9.0 | 14.9 |
*Results from Detour Lake are uncapped. |
Upper Beaver deposit
Drill hole | Zone | From
| To
| Depth of
| Estimated
| Gold grade (g/t)
| Gold
(g/t)
| Copper
(%)
| Copper
(%)
|
KLUB25-881W3 | Zone 201 | 587.6 | 594.4 | 555 | 6.4 | 7.9 | 7.9 | 0.98 | 0.98 |
including | Zone 201 | 591.0 | 592.8 | 555 | 1.8 | 15.0 | 15.0 | 0.85 | 0.85 |
KLUB25-881W5 | Zone 201 | 615.9 | 619.2 | 584 | 2.9 | 18.3 | 18.3 | 1.19 | 1.19 |
including | Zone 201 | 618.4 | 619.2 | 585 | 0.7 | 58.0 | 58.0 | 1.48 | 1.48 |
KLUB26-913A | Zone 201 | 597.5 | 602.0 | 531 | 4.2 | 4.5 | 4.5 | 1.07 | 1.07 |
including | Zone 201 | 597.5 | 599.0 | 530 | 1.4 | 10.6 | 10.6 | 1.29 | 1.29 |
KLUB26-913W5 | Zone 201 | 629.1 | 632.6 | 574 | 3.2 | 9.7 | 9.7 | 1.52 | 1.52 |
KLUB26-913W6 | Zone 201 | 647.7 | 653.8 | 599 | 6.0 | 8.3 | 8.3 | 0.40 | 0.40 |
including | Zone 201 | 651.0 | 652.0 | 599 | 1.0 | 44.3 | 44.3 | 1.64 | 1.64 |
and | Zone 201 | 656.5 | 663.5 | 607 | 6.9 | 6.0 | 6.0 | 0.53 | 0.53 |
KLUB26-916W2 | Zone 201 | 553.0 | 555.4 | 501 | 1.8 | 2.4 | 2.4 | 3.17 | 2.77 |
KLUB26-915A | Zone 107 | 595.5 | 596.5 | 535 | 0.9 | 45.5 | 45.5 | 0.21 | 0.21 |
*At Upper Beaver, results use capping factors of 85 g/t gold and 6.5% copper for Zone 201 and 135 g/t gold and 4.0% copper for Zone 107. |
Exploration Drill Collar Coordinates
Drill hole | UTM East* | UTM North* | Elevation
sea level) | Azimuth
| Dip (degrees) | Length
|
Odyssey mine | ||||||
MEX25-346WZB | 717451 | 5334739 | 309 | 143 | -78 | 2,221 |
MEX25-348ZA | 717440 | 5334731 | 310 | 182 | -75 | 3,000 |
UGEG-016-010 | 718856 | 5333901 | 113 | 163 | -66 | 845 |
UGEG-071-031 | 717758 | 5333977 | -345 | 143 | -42 | 711 |
UGEG-095-010 | 717593 | 5333755 | -619 | 143 | -27 | 375 |
UGEG-095-014 | 717591 | 5333756 | -619 | 150 | -56 | 360 |
UGEG-103-005 | 717561 | 5333797 | -699 | 214 | -34 | 370 |
MEX25-350Z | 716852 | 5334693 | 316 | 199 | -68 | 1,614 |
UGOD-051-017 | 718102 | 5334207 | -203 | 20 | -48 | 585 |
UGOD-057-005 | 718006 | 5334110 | -261 | 14 | -51 | 700 |
UGOD-057-012 | 718006 | 5334110 | -261 | 14 | -57 | 756 |
UGOD-057-013 | 718006 | 5334110 | -261 | 18 | -55 | 767 |
UGOD-064-018 | 717907 | 5334312 | -333 | 344 | -44 | 435 |
UGOD-064-019 | 717907 | 5334311 | -333 | 2 | -59 | 569 |
Detour Lake | ||||||
DLM25-1240 | 584832 | 5542449 | 296 | 188 | -59 | 1,176 |
DLM25-1243 | 586037 | 5542184 | 295 | 187 | -66 | 975 |
DLM25-1245 | 586199 | 5542065 | 292 | 181 | -58 | 762 |
DLM25-1246 | 585156 | 5542251 | 287 | 188 | -65 | 1,113 |
DLM25-1252 | 586120 | 5541916 | 290 | 179 | -67 | 720 |
DLM25-1255 | 585837 | 5542204 | 291 | 192 | -60 | 951 |
DLM25-1274 | 585796 | 5542210 | 291 | 186 | -65 | 951 |
DLM25-1282AW | 586597 | 5542188 | 298 | 179 | -68 | 669 |
DLM25-1282AW1 | 586597 | 5542188 | 298 | 179 | -68 | 1,253 |
DLM26-1299 | 587148 | 5541601 | 290 | 177 | -59 | 351 |
DLM26-1313 | 587187 | 5541623 | 291 | 178 | -59 | 402 |
Upper Beaver | ||||||
KLUB25-881W3 | 591667 | 5335847 | 304 | 151 | -74 | 642 |
KLUB25-881W5 | 591667 | 5335847 | 304 | 151 | -74 | 656 |
KLUB26-913A | 591687 | 5335928 | 305 | 155 | -71 | 647 |
KLUB26-913W5 | 591687 | 5335928 | 305 | 155 | -71 | 689 |
KLUB26-913W6 | 591687 | 5335928 | 305 | 155 | -71 | 700 |
KLUB26-916W2 | 591667 | 5335847 | 304 | 148 | -70 | 593 |
KLUB26-915A | 591844 | 5336055 | 303 | 149 | -69 | 641 |
*Coordinate Systems: NAD 83 UTM Zone 17N for Odyssey; NAD 1983 UTM Zone 17N for Detour Lake and Upper Beaver. |
APPENDIX B – FINANCIAL INFORMATION
AGNICO EAGLE MINES LIMITED | |||
SUMMARY OF OPERATIONS KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS | |||
(thousands of UnitedStates dollars, except where noted) | |||
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
2026 | 2025 | ||
Net income - key line items: | |||
Revenue from mine operations: | |||
LaRonde | 401,927 | 279,083 | |
Canadian Malartic | 754,853 | 422,047 | |
Goldex | 166,536 | 95,969 | |
Quebec | 1,323,316 | 797,099 | |
Detour Lake | 944,230 | 443,886 | |
Macassa | 306,444 | 235,662 | |
Ontario | 1,250,674 | 679,548 | |
Meliadine | 376,594 | 258,289 | |
Meadowbank | 594,426 | 405,085 | |
Nunavut | 971,020 | 663,374 | |
Fosterville | 180,676 | 109,829 | |
Australia | 180,676 | 109,829 | |
Kittila | 251,898 | 161,088 | |
Finland | 251,898 | 161,088 | |
Pinos Altos | 122,272 | 57,310 | |
Mexico | 122,272 | 57,310 | |
Corporate and Other | (267) | — | |
Revenues from mining operations | $ 4,099,589 | $ 2,468,248 | |
Production costs | 955,587 | 767,733 | |
Amortization of property, plant and mine development | 420,266 | 416,800 | |
Gross profit | 2,723,736 | 1,283,715 | |
Exploration, corporate and other | 164,112 | 89,144 | |
Income before income and mining taxes | 2,559,624 | 1,194,571 | |
Income and mining taxes expense | 864,163 | 379,840 | |
Net income for the period | $ 1,695,461 | $ 814,731 | |
Net income per share — basic | $ 3.39 | $ 1.62 | |
Net income per share — diluted | $ 3.38 | $ 1.62 | |
Cash flows: | |||
Cash provided by operating activities | $ 1,345,868 | $ 1,044,246 | |
Cash used in investing activities | $ (764,859) | $ (649,940) | |
Cash used in financing activities | $ (334,652) | $ (182,966) | |
Realized prices: | |||
Gold (per ounce) | $ 4,861 | $ 2,891 | |
Silver (per ounce) | $ 83.90 | $ 33.07 |
AGNICO EAGLE MINES LIMITED | |||
SUMMARY OF OPERATIONS KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS | |||
(thousands of UnitedStates dollars, except where noted) | |||
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
2026 | 2025 | ||
Payable production(i): | |||
Gold (ounces): | |||
LaRonde | 81,596 | 91,491 | |
Canadian Malartic | 166,216 | 159,773 | |
Goldex | 29,372 | 30,016 | |
Quebec | 277,184 | 281,280 | |
Detour Lake | 177,019 | 152,838 | |
Macassa | 55,593 | 86,028 | |
Ontario | 232,612 | 238,866 | |
Meliadine | 93,831 | 98,512 | |
Meadowbank | 113,862 | 140,126 | |
Nunavut | 207,693 | 238,638 | |
Fosterville | 41,443 | 43,615 | |
Australia | 41,443 | 43,615 | |
Kittila | 48,527 | 54,104 | |
Finland | 48,527 | 54,104 | |
Pinos Altos | 17,650 | 17,291 | |
Mexico | 17,650 | 17,291 | |
Total gold (ounces): | 825,109 | 873,794 | |
Silver (thousands of ounces) | 599 | 602 | |
Zinc (tonnes) | 1,019 | 1,742 | |
Copper (tonnes) | 1,479 | 1,384 | |
AGNICO EAGLE MINES LIMITED | |||
SUMMARY OF OPERATIONS KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS | |||
(thousands of UnitedStates dollars, except where noted) | |||
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
2026 | 2025 | ||
Payable metal sold(ii): | |||
Gold (ounces): | |||
LaRonde | 78,447 | 90,509 | |
Canadian Malartic | 155,297 | 144,663 | |
Goldex | 31,756 | 30,693 | |
Quebec | 265,500 | 265,865 | |
Detour Lake | 191,349 | 155,480 | |
Macassa | 62,034 | 81,000 | |
Ontario | 253,383 | 236,480 | |
Meliadine | 77,250 | 89,270 | |
Meadowbank | 121,761 | 140,350 | |
Nunavut | 199,011 | 229,620 | |
Fosterville | 38,000 | 38,000 | |
Australia | 38,000 | 38,000 | |
Kittila | 52,600 | 56,000 | |
Finland | 52,600 | 56,000 | |
Pinos Altos | 21,157 | 17,000 | |
Mexico | 21,157 | 17,000 | |
Total gold (ounces): | 829,651 | 842,965 | |
Silver (thousands of ounces) | 617 | 527 | |
Zinc (tonnes) | 1,184 | 1,812 | |
Copper (tonnes) | 1,509 | 1,398 | |
Notes: |
(i) Payable production (a non-GAAP non-financial performance measure) is the quantity of mineral produced during a period contained in products that are or will be sold by the Company, whether such products are sold during the period or held as inventories at the end of the period. For the three months ended March 31, 2026 and 2025, it excludes 418 payable gold ounces and 1,811 payable gold ounces produced at La India along with 76 payable gold ounces and 25 payable gold ounces produced at Creston Mascota, respectively. |
(ii) Payable metals sold at Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa exclude the in-kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines. For the three months ended March 31, 2025, it excludes 2,500 payable gold ounces sold at La India. |
AGNICO EAGLE MINES LIMITED | |||
CONDENSED INTERIM CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS | |||
(thousands of United States dollars, except share amounts) | |||
(Unaudited) | |||
As at | As at | ||
March 31, 2026 | December 31, 2025 | ||
ASSETS | |||
Current assets: | |||
Cash and cash equivalents | $ 3,111,869 | $ 2,866,053 | |
Inventories | 1,578,848 | 1,698,830 | |
Fair value of derivative financial instruments | 28,172 | 34,428 | |
Other current assets | 410,385 | 394,631 | |
Total current assets | 5,129,274 | 4,993,942 | |
Non-current assets: | |||
Goodwill | 4,157,672 | 4,157,672 | |
Property, plant and mine development | 23,027,704 | 22,850,540 | |
Investments | 1,814,118 | 1,508,252 | |
Other assets | 1,026,933 | 960,885 | |
Total assets | $ 35,155,701 | $ 34,471,291 | |
LIABILITIES | |||
Current liabilities: | |||
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities | $ 1,090,948 | $ 1,033,444 | |
Share based liabilities | 36,881 | 31,722 | |
Income taxes payable | 250,218 | 1,226,347 | |
Reclamation provision | 195,227 | 144,537 | |
Lease obligations | 32,573 | 30,480 | |
Fair value of derivative financial instruments | 23,475 | 5,676 | |
Total current liabilities | 1,629,322 | 2,472,206 | |
Non-current liabilities: | |||
Long-term debt | 196,548 | 196,271 | |
Reclamation provision | 1,291,147 | 1,318,476 | |
Lease obligations | 90,098 | 94,719 | |
Share based liabilities | 12,615 | 23,921 | |
Deferred income and mining tax liabilities | 5,450,784 | 5,373,013 | |
Other liabilities | 210,041 | 250,221 | |
Total liabilities | 8,880,555 | 9,728,827 | |
EQUITY | |||
Common shares: | |||
Outstanding — 500,653,224 common shares issued, less 616,987 shares held in trust | 18,759,399 | 18,699,862 | |
Stock options | 164,637 | 166,775 | |
Retained earnings | 6,814,704 | 5,463,906 | |
Other reserves | 536,406 | 411,921 | |
Total equity | 26,275,146 | 24,742,464 | |
Total liabilities and equity | $ 35,155,701 | $ 34,471,291 |
AGNICO EAGLE MINES LIMITED | |||
CONDENSED INTERIM CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME | |||
(thousands of UnitedStates dollars, except per share amounts) | |||
(Unaudited) | |||
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
2026 | 2025 | ||
REVENUES | |||
Revenues from mining operations | $ 4,099,589 | $ 2,468,248 | |
COST OF SALES | |||
Production costs | 955,587 | 767,733 | |
Amortization of property, plant and mine development | 420,266 | 416,800 | |
Gross profit | 2,723,736 | 1,283,715 | |
EXPENSES (INCOME) | |||
Exploration and corporate development | 52,556 | 41,805 | |
General and administrative | 77,850 | 60,709 | |
Finance costs | 15,756 | 22,444 | |
Gain on derivative financial instruments | (4,700) | (68,859) | |
Foreign currency translation gain | (733) | (60) | |
Care and maintenance | 22,596 | 13,901 | |
Other income and expenses | 787 | 19,204 | |
Income before income and mining taxes | 2,559,624 | 1,194,571 | |
Income and mining taxes expense | 864,163 | 379,840 | |
Net income for the period | $ 1,695,461 | $ 814,731 | |
Net income per share - basic | $ 3.39 | $ 1.62 | |
Net income per share - diluted | $ 3.38 | $ 1.62 | |
Adjusted net income per share - basic (i) | $ 3.41 | $ 1.53 | |
Adjusted net income per share - diluted (i) | $ 3.40 | $ 1.53 | |
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding (in thousands): | |||
Basic | 500,240 | 502,410 | |
Diluted | 501,729 | 503,773 | |
Notes: |
(i) Adjusted net income per share is not a recognized measure under IFRS Accounting Standards and this data may not be comparable to data reported by other companies. See Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance – Adjusted Net Income and Adjusted Net Income per Share for a discussion of the composition and usefulness of this measure and a reconciliation to the nearest IFRS Accounting Standards measure |
AGNICO EAGLE MINES LIMITED | |||
CONDENSED INTERIM CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS | |||
(thousands of UnitedStates dollars) | |||
(Unaudited) | |||
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
2026 | 2025 | ||
OPERATING ACTIVITIES | |||
Net income for the period | $ 1,695,461 | $ 814,731 | |
Add (deduct) adjusting items: | |||
Amortization of property, plant and mine development | 420,266 | 416,800 | |
Deferred income and mining taxes | 59,537 | 18,491 | |
Unrealized loss (gain) on currency and commodity derivatives | 24,054 | (31,120) | |
Unrealized gain on warrants | (18,989) | (54,168) | |
Stock-based compensation | 34,931 | 27,393 | |
Foreign currency translation gain | (733) | (60) | |
Other | 16,835 | 17,323 | |
Changes in non-cash working capital balances: | |||
Income taxes | (989,080) | (176,739) | |
Inventories | 36,800 | 30,917 | |
Other current assets | (11,014) | 31,390 | |
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities | 77,800 | (50,712) | |
Cash provided by operating activities | 1,345,868 | 1,044,246 | |
INVESTING ACTIVITIES | |||
Additions to property, plant and mine development | (613,749) | (450,124) | |
Purchase of O3 Mining, net of cash and cash equivalents acquired | — | (121,960) | |
Contributions for acquisition of mineral assets | (5,280) | (3,825) | |
Purchase of equity securities and other investments | (144,702) | (68,057) | |
Other investing activities | (1,128) | (5,974) | |
Cash used in investing activities | (764,859) | (649,940) | |
FINANCING ACTIVITIES | |||
Repayment of lease obligations | (7,238) | (9,178) | |
Dividends paid | (203,165) | (175,567) | |
Repurchase of common shares | (167,833) | (60,050) | |
Proceeds on exercise of stock options | 31,434 | 52,026 | |
Common shares issued | 12,150 | 9,803 | |
Cash used in financing activities | (334,652) | (182,966) | |
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents | (541) | 541 | |
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents during the period | 245,816 | 211,881 | |
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period | 2,866,053 | 926,431 | |
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period | $ 3,111,869 | $ 1,138,312 | |
SUPPLEMENTAL CASH FLOW INFORMATION | |||
Interest paid | $ 563 | $ 1,185 | |
Income and mining taxes paid | $ 1,788,322 | $ 536,602 |

SOURCE Agnico Eagle Mines Limited

Igår, 23:00
AGNICO EAGLE REPORTS FIRST QUARTER 2026 RESULTS, INCLUDING RECORD QUARTERLY OPERATING MARGINS AND ADJUSTED NET INCOME
Canada NewsWire
TORONTO, April 30, 2026
Stock Symbol: AEM (NYSE and TSX)
(All amounts expressed in U.S. dollars unless otherwise noted)
TORONTO , April 30, 2026 /CNW/ - Agnico Eagle Mines Limited (NYSE: AEM) (TSX: AEM) ("Agnico Eagle" or the "Company") today reported financial and operating results for the first quarter of 2026.
"We delivered a solid start to 2026, achieving record operating margins while production and costs tracked well to plan. With gold production expected to be weighted to a stronger second half of the year, we are managing cost volatility through disciplined execution and asset optimization, supported by our regional operating model. This positions us well to deliver on our full year guidance," said Ammar Al-Joundi, Agnico Eagle's President and Chief Executive Officer. "We are excited by the strong progress across our industry leading growth pipeline and are beginning to look beyond the 20–30% production growth already expected over the next decade, with our recently announced proposed acquisitions in Finland marking a milestone in our next phase of long-term growth. At the same time, we remain committed to returning value to shareholders, through our dividend and the expansion of our share repurchase program."
First quarter 2026 highlights:
______________________________________ |
1 Payable production of a mineral means the quantity of a mineral produced during a period contained in products that have been or will be sold by the Company whether such products are shipped during the period or held as inventory at the end of the period. |
2 Total cash costs per ounce and all-in sustaining costs per ounce (or AISC per ounce) are non-GAAP measures that are not standardized financial measures under IFRS® Accounting Standards and in this news release, unless otherwise specified, are reported on (i) a per ounce of gold production basis, and (ii) a by-product basis. For reconciliations of each of these non-GAAP measures to production costs on both a by-product and a co-product basis and a description of their composition and usefulness, see "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below. |
3 Adjusted net income, free cash flow and where applicable, their related per share measures are non-GAAP measures that are not standardized financial measures under IFRS Accounting Standards. For a description of the composition and usefulness of these non-GAAP measures and a reconciliation to the most comparable measure prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, see "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below. |
4 Net cash is a non-GAAP measure that is not a standardized financial measure under IFRS Accounting Standards. For a description of the composition and usefulness of this non-GAAP measure and a reconciliation to the most comparable measure prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, see "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below. |
First Quarter 2026 Results Conference Call and Webcast Tomorrow
The Company's senior management will host a conference call on Friday, May 1, 2026, at 8:30 AM (E.D.T.) to discuss the Company's financial and operating results.
Via Webcast:
To listen to the live webcast of the conference call, you may register on the Company's website at www.agnicoeagle.com , or directly via the link here .
Via Phone:
To join the conference call by phone, please dial 437-900-0527 or toll-free 1-888-510-2154 to be entered into the call by an operator. To ensure your participation, please call approximately five minutes prior to the scheduled start of the call.
To join the conference call by phone without operator assistance, you may register your phone number here 30 minutes prior to the scheduled start of the call to receive an automated call back.
Replay Archive:
Please dial 289-819-1450 or toll-free 1-888-660-6345, access code 72715#. The conference call replay will expire on June 1, 2026.
The webcast, along with presentation slides, will be archived for 180 days on the Company's website.
Annual Meeting
The Company will host its Annual and Special Meeting of Shareholders (the "AGM") on Friday, May 1, 2026 at 11:00 AM (E.D.T). During the AGM, management will provide an overview of the Company's activities.
The AGM will be held in person at Arcadian Court, 401 Bay Street, Simpson Tower, 8th Floor, Toronto, Ontario, M5H 2Y4 and online at: https://meetnow.global/M59UWL4 .
For details explaining how to attend, communicate and vote virtually at the AGM see the Company's Management Information Circular dated March 19, 2026, filed under the Company's profile on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and on EDGAR at www.sec.gov . Shareholders who have questions about voting their shares or attending the AGM may contact Investor Relations by phone at 416-947-1212, by toll-free phone at 1-888-822-6714 or by email at investor.relations@agnicoeagle.com or may contact the Company's strategic shareholder advisor and proxy solicitation agent, Laurel Hill Advisory Group, by calling 1-877-452-7184 (toll-free in Canada and the United States) or 1-416-304-0211 (International), by texting "INFO" to either number, or by e-mail at assistance@laurelhill.com .
First Quarter 2026 Production and Costs
Production and Cost Results Summary | ||||
Three Months Ended March 31, | ||||
2026 | 2025* | |||
Gold production** (ounces) | 825,109 | 873,794 | ||
Gold sales (ounces)*** | 829,651 | 842,965 | ||
Production costs per ounce | $ 1,158 | $ 879 | ||
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 1,093 | $ 895 | ||
AISC per ounce | $ 1,483 | $ 1,175 |
* | Total cash costs per ounce and AISC per ounce for the three months ended March 31, 2025 have been restated using the Company's revised composition for periods commencing on or after January 1, 2026. Using the Company's composition of this measure for periods ending on or prior to December 31, 2025, total cash costs per ounce were $903 for the consolidated Company and AISC per ounce was $1,183 for the consolidated Company. |
** | Gold production for the three months ended March 31, 2026 excludes payable gold production at La India and Creston Mascota of 418 and 76 ounces, respectively, which were produced from residual leaching. Gold production for the three months ended March 31, 2025 excludes payable gold production at La India and Creston Mascota of 1,811 ounces and 25 ounces, respectively, which were producing from residual leaching. |
*** | Payable metals sold at Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa exclude the in-kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines. For the three months ended March 31, 2025, payable metals sold excludes 2,500 payable gold ounces sold at La India. |
Gold Production
Gold production decreased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to lower production at Macassa and Meadowbank (lower grades), partially offset by higher production at Detour Lake (higher grades and recoveries).
Production Costs per Ounce
Production costs per ounce increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to higher royalty costs resulting from higher gold prices, lower gold production and the impact of a stronger Canadian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar between periods.
Total Cash Costs per Ounce
Total cash costs per ounce increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to the reasons described above for the increase in production costs per ounce.
AISC per Ounce
AISC per ounce increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period due to the reasons described above for the increase in total cash costs per ounce, higher sustaining capital expenditures, primarily at Macassa and Fosterville, higher non-cash reclamation related costs and higher general and administrative expenses.
Refer to the Company's Management Discussion & Analysis for the first quarter of 2026 (the "MD&A") under the caption "Financial and Operating Results" for additional variance analysis on gold production, production costs, minesite costs per tonne and total cash costs per ounce compared to the prior-year period.
First Quarter 2026 Financial Results
Financial Results Summary | ||||
Three Months Ended March 31, | ||||
2026 | 2025 | |||
Realized gold price (per ounce) 5 | $ 4,861 | $ 2,891 | ||
Net income (millions) | $ 1,695 | $ 815 | ||
Adjusted net income (millions) | $ 1,706 | $ 770 | ||
EBITDA (millions) 6 | $ 2,996 | $ 1,634 | ||
Adjusted EBITDA (millions) 6 | $ 3,011 | $ 1,590 | ||
Cash provided by operating activities (millions) | $ 1,346 | $ 1,044 | ||
Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital (millions) 6 | $ 2,231 | $ 1,209 | ||
Capital expenditures* (millions) 6 | $ 574 | $ 419 | ||
Free cash flow (millions) | $ 732 | $ 594 | ||
Free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital (millions) 6 | $ 1,618 | $ 759 | ||
Net income per share (basic) | $ 3.39 | $ 1.62 | ||
Adjusted net income per share (basic) | $ 3.41 | $ 1.53 | ||
Cash provided by operating activities per share (basic) | $ 2.69 | $ 2.08 | ||
Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital per share (basic) | $ 4.46 | $ 2.41 | ||
Free cash flow per share (basic) | $ 1.46 | $ 1.18 | ||
Free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital per share (basic) | $ 3.23 | $ 1.51 |
*Includes capitalized exploration |
_________________________ |
5 Realized gold price is calculated as gold revenues from mining operations divided by the number of ounces sold. |
6 "EBITDA" means earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization. EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA, capital expenditures, cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital and free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital and, where applicable, their related per share measures, are non-GAAP measures that are not standardized measures under IFRS Accounting Standards. For a description of the composition and usefulness of these non-GAAP measures and a reconciliation to the most comparable measure prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, see "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below. |
Net Income
Net income increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to record operating margins resulting from higher realized gold prices, partially offset by lower gold sales and higher income and mining taxes.
Net income in the first quarter of 2026 of $1,695 million ($3.39 per share) includes the following items (net of tax): reclamation adjustments of $9 million ($0.02 per share), net gains on derivative financial instruments of $7 million ($0.01 per share), net asset disposal losses of $7 million ($0.01 per share), foreign currency translation losses on deferred tax liabilities of $5 million ($0.01 per share) and other adjustments totaling $3 million ($0.01 per share). Excluding these items results in adjusted net income of $1,706 million or $3.41 per share for the first quarter of 2026.
Adjusted EBITDA
Adjusted EBITDA increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to higher revenues from mining operations (higher realized gold prices partially offset by lower gold sales), partially offset by higher production costs (higher royalty costs), higher general and administrative expenses and the impact of a stronger Canadian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar between periods.
Cash Provided by Operating Activities
Cash provided by operating activities and cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital both increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to higher operating margins, partially offset by lower gold sales and higher income and mining taxes. Cash provided by operating activities was reduced by unfavourable changes in non-cash working capital balances primarily due to approximately $1.3 billion in cash taxes paid in the quarter relating to the 2025 taxation year. Total cash taxes paid in the first quarter of 2026 were $1.8 billion, representing approximately 50% of the expected cash taxes for 2026.
Free Cash Flow
Free cash flow and free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital both increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to the reasons described above related to cash provided by operating activities, partially offset by higher development capital expenditures related to Odyssey, Hope Bay and Detour Lake underground pipeline projects.
Capital Expenditures
The table below sets out a summary of capital expenditures, in each case broken down between sustaining capital expenditures and development capital expenditures by mine, and capitalized exploration in the first quarter of 2026.
Summary of Capital Expenditures | |||
(thousands) | Three Months Ended | ||
Mar 31, 2026 | |||
Capital
| Capitalized
| ||
Sustaining Capital Expenditures** | |||
LaRonde | $ 15,661 | $ 1,232 | |
Canadian Malartic | 22,761 | 987 | |
Goldex | 10,105 | 200 | |
Quebec | 48,527 | 2,419 | |
Detour Lake | 42,531 | — | |
Macassa | 19,545 | 827 | |
Ontario | 62,076 | 827 | |
Meliadine | 16,310 | 1,425 | |
Meadowbank | 23,155 | — | |
Nunavut | 39,465 | 1,425 | |
Fosterville | 22,540 | 496 | |
Australia | 22,540 | 496 | |
Kittila | 13,167 | 982 | |
Finland | 13,167 | 982 | |
Pinos Altos | 8,756 | 211 | |
Mexico | 8,756 | 211 | |
Other | 2,061 | (973) | |
Total Sustaining Capital Expenditures | $ 196,592 | $ 5,387 | |
Development Capital Expenditures** | |||
LaRonde | $ 20,397 | $ — | |
Canadian Malartic | 85,092 | 7,519 | |
Goldex | 6,080 | 1,997 | |
Quebec | 111,569 | 9,516 | |
Detour Lake | 73,444 | 6,621 | |
Detour Lake underground | 4,266 | 12,274 | |
Macassa | 24,510 | 8,819 | |
Upper Beaver | 7,316 | 16,595 | |
Ontario | 109,536 | 44,309 | |
Meliadine | 18,374 | 4,181 | |
Meadowbank | 9,174 | 22 | |
Hope Bay | 31,764 | 13,834 | |
Nunavut | 59,312 | 18,037 | |
Fosterville | 4,314 | 3,477 | |
Australia | 4,314 | 3,477 | |
Kittila | 946 | 2,600 | |
Finland | 946 | 2,600 | |
Pinos Altos | 1,821 | 11 | |
San Nicolás (50%) | 1,326 | 1,391 | |
Mexico | 3,147 | 1,402 | |
Other | 3,466 | — | |
Total Development Capital Expenditures | $ 292,290 | $ 79,341 | |
Total Capital Expenditures | $ 488,882 | $ 84,728 |
* | Excludes capitalized exploration |
** | Sustaining capital expenditures and development capital expenditure are non-GAAP measures that are not standardized measures under IFRS Accounting Standards. For a description of the composition and usefulness of these non-GAAP measures and a reconciliation to the most comparable measure prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, see "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below. |
2026 Guidance Reiterated
In the first three months of 2026, the Company achieved approximately 24% of the mid-point of its full year gold production guidance, while achieving total cash costs per ounce and AISC per ounce within the guidance range. Based on these results, the Company is reiterating its guidance for the full year 2026. Full year expected payable gold production in 2026 at 3.3 to 3.5 million ounces is now weighted approximately 48% to the first half of the year and 52% to the second half.
A summary of the Company's guidance is set out below.
2026 Guidance Summary | |||||
($ millions, unless otherwise stated) | |||||
2026 | 2026 | ||||
Guidance Range | Mid-Point | ||||
Gold production (thousands of ounces) | 3,300 | 3,500 | 3,400 | ||
Total cash costs per ounce 7 | $ 1,020 | $ 1,120 | $ 1,070 | ||
AISC per ounce 7 | $ 1,400 | $ 1,550 | $ 1,475 | ||
Capital expenditures 7 (excluding capitalized exploration) | $ 2,175 | $ 2,395 | $ 2,285 | ||
Capitalized exploration | $ 290 | $ 330 | $ 310 | ||
Capital expenditures (including capitalized exploration) | $ 2,465 | $ 2,725 | $ 2,595 | ||
Exploration and corporate development* | $ 275 | $ 305 | $ 290 | ||
Depreciation and amortization expense | $ 1,550 | $ 1,750 | $ 1,650 | ||
General and administrative expense** | $ 230 | $ 260 | $ 245 | ||
Other costs*** | $ 75 | $ 95 | $ 85 | ||
NTI Payment 8 | $ 185 | $ 195 | $ 190 | ||
Cash taxes | $ 3,400 | $ 3,600 | $ 3,500 | ||
Effective tax rate (%) | 34 % | 36 % | 35 % |
* | 2026 Guidance includes $185 million to $205 million related to exploration and $90 million to $100 million related to corporate development |
** | 2026 Guidance includes share-based compensation, expected to be between $65 million and $75 million. General and administrative expense is expected to fluctuate based on changes in the Company's share price, which affect the costs related to stock-based compensation. |
*** | 2026 Guidance includes $35 million to $45 million related to site maintenance costs primarily at Hope Bay and Northern Territory in Australia and $40 million to $50 million related to remediation expenses and other miscellaneous costs |
_____________________________ |
7 The Company's guidance for total cash costs per ounce, AISC per ounce and capital expenditures is forward-looking non-GAAP information. For a description of the composition and usefulness of these non-GAAP measures and a discussion of revisions that have been made by the Company to the composition of certain of these measures, see "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below. |
8 The "NTI Payment" is the payment to Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. ("NTI") under the Company's mineral production lease in respect of the Amaruq mine at Meadowbank, which is a royalty based on net profits, subject to a minimum profit margin. NTI Payments in this table are reflected on a cash basis with 2026 Guidance based on a gold price assumption of $4,500 per ounce. |
Cash Taxes
The Company's effective tax rate continues to be expected to be approximately 34% to 36% for the full year of 2026. Total cash taxes paid in the first quarter of 2026 were $1.8 billion, which included a $1.3 billion payment for the remaining cash tax liability for 2025. This represents approximately 50% of total cash taxes expected for 2026. The remaining cash taxes in 2026 are expected to be paid in quarterly installments ranging between $525 million and $575 million.
Cost Considerations Related to Current Market Uncertainty
While the ongoing conflict in the Middle East introduces uncertainty related to fuel price volatility and the global supply chain, the Company currently anticipates that volatility of fuel and commodity prices and currency exchange rates will be captured within the total cash costs per ounce and AISC per ounce guidance ranges of $1,020 to $1,120 and $1,400 to $1,550, respectively. Supported by the Company's regional operating strategy, with a focus on local procurement and resilient supply chains, the Company does not currently anticipate any significant risk of disruption to fuel, consumables or parts supplies across its operations. While higher transportation and freight costs are expected to persist amid ongoing uncertainty, the Company continues to actively monitor the situation for any potential impacts.
The Company's full year 2026 cost guidance is based on an assumed diesel benchmark price of $0.78 per litre (excluding transportation and taxes). Including the diesel purchased for the Company's Nunavut operations that was delivered as part of the 2025 sealift, approximately 54% of the Company's total estimated diesel exposure for 2026 is hedged at an average benchmark price of $0.71 per litre (excluding transportation and taxes), which is expected to reduce the Company's exposure to diesel price volatility for the balance of 2026.
Diesel represents approximately 10% of the Company's operating costs, comprising approximately 7% related to direct consumption for mobile equipment and on-site power generation, and approximately 3% related to transportation and freight. With respect to direct diesel consumption, the Company estimates that a 10% change in diesel prices would impact total cash costs per ounce by approximately $4 on a net basis after hedges (approximately $8 excluding the impact of diesel hedges) for the full year 2026. For indirect diesel exposure related to transportation, a 10% change in diesel prices is estimated to impact total cash costs per ounce by approximately $2 net of the fuel sealift to Nunavut.
Currency Hedges
The Company's full year 2026 cost guidance is based on assumed exchange rates of 1.36 C$/US$, 1.18 US$/EUR, 1.40 A$/US$ and 17.50 MXN/US$.
Based on its C$/US$ assumption for 2026 cost estimates, the Company has hedged approximately 42% of its estimated remaining Canadian dollar exposure for 2026 at an average floor price providing protection in respect of exchange rate movements below 1.38 C$/US$, while allowing for participation in respect of exchange rate movements up to an average of 1.42 C$/US$.
The Company will continue to monitor market conditions and anticipates continuing to opportunistically add to its operating currency and diesel hedges to strategically support its key input costs for 2026.
Tariffs
The international trade disputes set in motion in February 2025 by US tariffs, retaliatory tariffs and other actions remain fluid. The Company continues to believe that its revenue structure will be largely unaffected by the tariffs as its gold production is mostly refined in Canada, Australia or Europe. The Company continues to monitor its exposure to the tariffs and trade disputes and its alternatives to inputs sourced from suppliers that are or may become subject to the tariffs or other trade disputes. The cost guidance provided in this news release does not include any potential impact from such tariffs or trade disputes.
Balance Sheet Strength Supported by Strong Net Cash Position; Continued Commitment to Shareholder Returns
Cash and cash equivalents increased by $246 million from the prior quarter, primarily due to cash provided by operating activities resulting from record operating margins (higher realized gold prices partially offset by higher royalty costs). The increase was partially offset by unfavourable changes in non-cash components of working capital (including an approximately $1.3 billion payment of cash taxes related to the 2025 taxation year), $614 million of capital expenditures including working capital adjustments and $375 million returned to shareholders during the quarter through dividends and share repurchases under the NCIB.
As at March 31, 2026, the Company's total long-term debt was $197 million, consistent with the prior quarter. No amounts were outstanding under the Company's unsecured revolving bank credit facility as at March 31, 2026 and available liquidity under the facility remained at approximately $2 billion, not including the uncommitted $1 billion accordion feature.
Net cash increased to $2,915 million in the first quarter of 2026 compared to the prior quarter balance of $2,670 million due to the increase in cash and cash equivalents of $246 million. See "Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance" below for the calculation of net cash.
On April 29, 2026, Fitch Ratings upgraded the Company's investment grade credit rating to A- with a Stable Outlook, reflecting the Company's strong operating profile, favorable low cost position and sustained commitment to a strengthening balance sheet. The Company strives to maintain a strong financial position and an investment grade balance sheet.
Shareholder Returns
The Company remains committed to delivering strong returns to shareholders in 2026 through a combination of the dividend and share repurchases under the NCIB, with a target to return approximately 40% of annual free cash flow to shareholders, assuming current gold prices and subject to operational needs.
The Company will evaluate opportunities to reduce the dilution associated with the Rupert transaction, including potentially returning the proceeds of portfolio investment sales to shareholders through share repurchases under the NCIB.
Normal Course Issuer Bid
In the first quarter of 2026, the Company repurchased 721,211 common shares under the NCIB at an average price of $207.68 per share for aggregate purchases of $150 million.
The Company believes that its NCIB is a flexible and effective complementary tool that, together with the quarterly dividend, is part of the Company's overall capital allocation program and generates value for shareholders. Under the NCIB, the Company may purchase a maximum of 5% of the issued and outstanding common shares, subject to maximum authorized purchases of $1 billion. Purchases under the NCIB may continue for up to one year from its commencement on May 4, 2025.
The Company intends to seek approval from the TSX to renew the NCIB for another year in May 2026 on substantially the same terms; but intends to increase its internal limit on purchases of common shares to $2 billion. Additional details will be provided at the time of the renewal.
Dividend Record and Payment Dates for the Second Quarter of 2026
The Company's Board of Directors has declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.45 per common share, payable on June 15, 2026 to shareholders of record as of June 1, 2026. Agnico Eagle has declared a cash dividend every year since 1983.
Expected Dividend Record and Payment Dates for the 2026 Fiscal Year
Record Date | Payment Date |
March 2, 2026* | March 16, 2026* |
June 1, 2026** | June 15, 2026** |
September 1, 2026 | September 15, 2026 |
December 1, 2026 | December 15, 2026 |
* Paid
|
Dividend Reinvestment Plan
For information on the Company's dividend reinvestment plan, see Dividend Reinvestment Plan .
International Dividend Currency Exchange
For information on the Company's international dividend currency exchange program, please contact Computershare Trust Company of Canada by phone at 1.800.564.6253 or online at www.investorcentre.com or www.computershare.com/investor .
Committed to Sustainability
17th Annual Sustainability Report for 2025 Released
The Company released its 2025 Sustainability Report (the "Report") on April 30, 2026, providing an overview of the Company's strategy, practices and risk management approach related to health, safety, environment and sustainability, along with a comprehensive review of sustainability performance.
The Report includes mining industry-specific indicators from the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board Metals and Mining disclosures and metrics, and certain indicators in reference to the Global Reporting Initiative standards.
The Report's theme, "Together, We Make Mining Work", reflects the Company's belief that responsible mining is achieved through collaboration. For almost 70 years, the Company has recognized that long-term success is built through strong relationships with employees, Indigenous Peoples, communities, partners and stakeholders and the Company remains committed to operating in a way that creates shared value for all stakeholders.
Report Highlights:
Commitment to the Development of Inuit Education
The Company's 2025 Sustainability Report can be accessed here .
Key Value Drivers – Building the Next Phase of Growth
The Company is advancing a disciplined growth strategy aimed at enhancing the gold production profile in the short-term and supporting a pathway to increase annual gold production by 20-30% over the next decade, with a first step-up in production expected in 2030 and the potential to exceed 4.0 million ounces in the early 2030s. The growth is anchored in the expansions of world-class assets at Canadian Malartic and Detour Lake, as well as the construction of Upper Beaver, Hope Bay and San Nicolas located in regions where the Company operates and has technical expertise, established community relationships, existing infrastructure and established supply chains, supporting compelling risk-adjusted returns.
Key Project | 2026 Gold
| Anticipated
| Anticipated
| Anticipated
|
Canadian Malartic | 575 — 590 | 2033 | 400 — 500 | — |
Detour Lake | 700 — 715 | 2030 | 300 — 350 | — |
Upper Beaver | — | 2030 | 200 — 225 | 3,600 |
Hope Bay | — | 2030 | 400 — 425 | — |
San Nicolás (50%)** | — | 2030 | — | 50,000 — 60,000 |
* | The forecast parameters were based on internal evaluations, which are preliminary in nature and include inferred mineral resources. For a description see "Notes to Investors Regarding Certain Project Evaluations" below |
** | San Nicolás incremental annual production also includes approximately 150,000 to 160,000 tonnes of zinc in first eight years of production and 20,000 to 30,000 tonnes of zinc in subsequent years |
Canadian Malartic – Potential for 400,000 to 500,000 ounces of incremental annual gold production
The Company continues to advance the transition to underground mining with the construction of the Odyssey mine, including the development of Odyssey Shaft #1 and is advancing internal evaluations on three projects that, together, have the potential to increase annual gold production, starting in 2033, towards one million ounces. These projects include (i) a second shaft at Odyssey, (ii) the development of a satellite open pit at Marban and (iii) the development of the Wasamac underground project. Marban and Wasamac are located approximately 12 kilometres and 100 kilometres from the Canadian Malartic mill, respectively.
Odyssey Development
In the first quarter of 2026, mine development advanced with a continued focus on the main ramp, which reached a depth of 1,151 metres as of March 31, 2026, and the development of the East Gouldie production levels. Production via ramp from East Gouldie commenced in March 2026, approximately three months ahead of plan. Development remains a priority, with the Company targeting a sustained development rate of approximately 2,000 metres per month, supported by the integration of new development teams and equipment, increased hoisting capacity, optimization of hauling and service activities, and the increased use of automation and autonomous hauling. The excavation of two ventilation raises from surface to level 58 and the construction of the main exhaust fan station also advanced, with commissioning expected in June 2026.
Work continued on the development and construction of the first loading station between levels 102 and 111, including the crushing and material‑handling circuit, shaft loading pocket and maintenance shop. Development activities continue to progress on schedule in support of the planned start of shaft‑hoisted production from East Gouldie in the second quarter of 2027. Shaft sinking activities continued ahead of schedule, with the excavation of the material‑handling infrastructure for the second loading station between levels 137 and 146 now expected to be completed in the second quarter of 2026 and the completion of the first phase of shaft sinking to a planned depth of 1,580 metres now expected at year-end 2026. The shaft reached a depth of 1,514 metres as at March 31, 2026. A second phase of sinking is expected to resume in 2029 and be completed in 2031, extending the shaft to its final expected depth of 1,870 metres. The third loading station, located between levels 172 and 181, is expected to be completed and commissioned in 2031.
Construction of key surface infrastructure progressed, with the operational complex expected to be completed in the second quarter of 2026 and phase two of the paste plant (designed for a 20,000 tonnes per day ("tpd") capacity) expected to be completed in the fourth quarter of 2026. The fabrication of the production hoist is complete and delivery of the various components of the hoist is ongoing, with assembly to start in the second quarter of 2026. Commissioning of the production hoist is expected in the second quarter of 2027.
Odyssey Shaft #2
The Company is advancing an internal technical evaluation of a potential second shaft at the Odyssey mine. Drilling of the geotechnical pilot hole at the planned location has been completed to a depth of 1,800 metres. Current work is focused on mine design and planning, surface layout, headframe design and preparatory activities to support the permitting process. The evaluation is expected to be completed in the fourth quarter of 2026.
Exploration at Odyssey
During the first quarter of 2026, 13 surface rigs and 16 underground rigs were in operation, drilling a total of 56,635 metres supplemented by an additional six surface rigs completing 13,455 metres of drilling dedicated to regional exploration around Canadian Malartic, including the Marban project.
Exploration drilling targeted multiple areas of the Odyssey mine, returning positive results in the upper eastern, central, western and deeper areas of the East Gouldie deposit and in the internal zones of the Odyssey deposit.
In the upper eastern extension of the East Gouldie deposit, underground drilling was highlighted by hole UGEG-103-005 intersecting 6.7 g/t gold over 36.0 metres at 1,089 metres depth, including 12.6 g/t gold over 15.3 metres at 1,089 metres depth; and hole UGEG-095-014 intersecting 5.5 g/t gold over 10.3 metres at 1,061 metres depth, 5.8 g/t gold over 9.8 metres at 1,153 metres depth, 5.1 g/t gold over 6.3 metres at 1,175 metres depth and 3.0 g/t gold over 15.8 metres at 1,187 metres depth.
In the Odyssey deposit, conversion drilling encountered significant mineralization in the lower portion of the porphyry in the internal zones, highlighted by hole UGOD-057-012 intersecting 6.1 g/t gold over 12.9 metres (core length) at 1,017 metres depth, including 12.0 g/t gold over 4.9 metres (core length) at 1,020 metres depth, and 9.0 g/t gold over 53.5 metres (core length) at 1,067 metres depth; and hole UGOD-064-019 intersecting 2.8 g/t gold over 27.6 metres (core length) at 992 metres depth, including 5.6 g/t gold over 8.0 metres (core length) at 992 metres depth. The internal zones in the vicinity of the Odyssey North zone will be further investigated in 2026 to help in planning the future mining infrastructure in this area.
Selected recent drill intersections from the Odyssey mine are set out in the composite longitudinal section below and in a table in the Appendix.
[Odyssey– Composite Cross and Longitudinal Sections]
Marban
At the Marban deposit, located approximately 12 kilometres from the Canadian Malartic mill, the Company envisions the potential development of a satellite open pit operating at a planned mining rate between 14,000 to 16,000 tpd and producing approximately 120,000 to 150,000 ounces of gold annually over a mine life of approximately 12 years with the potential for initial production as early as 2033.
During the first quarter of 2026 at Marban, the second phase of an exploration and conversion drilling program completed 29 holes totalling 7,013 metres. The program mainly targeted the northern and eastern extensions of the Marban deposit near and beyond the newly expanded proposed pit outline.
Wasamac
At Wasamac, the Company envisions an underground satellite operation with a planned mining rate of approximately 3,200 tpd. Ore is expected to be transported to the Canadian Malartic mill for processing, with an average annual gold production expected to be approximately 90,000 ounces with the potential for initial production as early as 2033. In the first quarter of 2026, the Company advanced optimization and trade‑off studies alongside permitting activities and engagement with stakeholders.
Detour Lake – Potential for 300,000 to 350,000 ounces of incremental annual gold production
In the first quarter of 2026, excavation of the exploration ramp advanced by 345 metres to a total length of 823 metres, reaching a depth of 147 metres as of March 31, 2026. The Company is ramping up its workforce and integrating additional equipment in preparation for the commencement of multi‑face development expected to begin in the third quarter of 2026. Extension of the exploration ramp to the planned bulk‑sampling location at level 200 is expected to be completed in the first half of 2027.
Other activities supporting the underground project during the first quarter of 2026 included the commencement of overburden excavation for the conveyor ramp portal near the mill, with underground ramp development planned to begin in the first quarter of 2027. Work also progressed on the construction of the camp extension, and detailed engineering was initiated for the paste plant, ore‑handling system and electrical infrastructure.
At Detour Lake during the first quarter of 2026, exploration drilling totalled 39,052 metres. The program continued to expand and infill the mineralization below and to the west of the mineral resource pit. The first underground drill was mobilized during the first quarter of 2026 and completed 726 metres of drilling.
To complement the planned bulk sample at Level 200, the Company has initiated a high-intensity drill program targeting Domain 54, similar to the investigation of Domain 53 in 2025, to validate the continuity of mineralization and improve the accuracy of the geological model. Highlights from the high-intensity drilling included hole DLM26-1299 intersecting 14.0 g/t gold over 2.5 metres at 84 metres depth and 8.9 g/t gold over 14.1 metres at 187 metres depth; and hole DLM26-1313 intersecting 2.9 g/t gold over 23.2 metres at 210 metres depth, including 8.1 g/t gold over 6.0 metres at 218 metres depth and 14.9 g/t gold over 9.0 metres at 238 metres depth.
Drilling in the West Extension zone approximately 1.5 kilometres west of the resource-pit outline continued to extend the underground mineral potential to the west with highlights of hole DLM25-1243 intersecting 28.0 g/t gold over 4.4 metres at 734 metres depth and 11.7 g/t gold over 2.6 metres at 794 metres depth; hole DLM25-1255 intersecting 2.6 g/t gold over 27.4 metres at 669 metres depth; hole DLM25-1274 intersecting 14.0 g/t gold over 2.6 metres at 797 metres depth and 3.6 g/t gold over 9.5 metres at 816 metres depth; and hole DLM25-1245 intersecting 10.7 g/t gold over 10.1 metres at 497 metres depth, including 37.8 g/t gold over 2.6 metres at 501 metres depth.
Drilling that tested the West Extension zone approximately 2.5 kilometres west of the resource-pit outline was highlighted by hole DLM25-1240 intersecting 10.0 g/t gold over 3.1 metres at 922 metres depth.
Selected recent drill intersections from Detour Lake are set out in the composite longitudinal section below and in a table in the Appendix.
[Detour Lake – Composite Longitudinal Section]
The Company also has a regional exploration program underway at Detour Lake, with $3.7 million budgeted in 2026 for 10,000 metres of drilling that will include condemnation drilling of planned and proposed infrastructure.
Upper Beaver – Potential for 200,000 to 225,000 ounces of annual gold production and 3,600 tonnes of copper
Located approximately 20 kilometres from the Company's Macassa mine, the Upper Beaver project is envisioned as a standalone mine and mill, with the potential to produce 200,000 to 225,000 ounces of gold and 3,600 tonnes of copper per year, based on a planned mining and milling rate of 5,000 tpd.
Development activities continued to advance ahead of schedule in the first quarter of 2026, with the exploration ramp advancing by 514 metres and reaching a depth of 108 metres, and the shaft reaching a depth of 382 metres as at March 31, 2026.
During the first quarter of 2026, a high-intensity exploration drilling program at a 20-metre spacing focused on a portion of the Upper Beaver deposit between approximately 500 to 600 metres depth that is dominated by vein systems that are representative of the larger deposit. The primary objective of the high-intensity drilling is to validate the mineral resource model and assess grade-variability within the most representative geological zones of the Upper Beaver deposit. This high-intensity drilling program is expected to complement the planned bulk sample at the 760‑metre level and has the potential to bring forward initial production to early 2030.
More than half of the high-intensity drilling program has been completed, starting with Zone 201 and continuing into Zone 107.
Recent highlights from Zone 201 include hole KLUB26-913A intersecting 4.5 g/t gold and 1.07% copper over 4.2 metres at 531 metres depth; hole KLUB26-881W3 intersecting 7.9 g/t gold and 0.98% copper over 6.4 metres at 555 metres depth; hole KLUB26-881W5 intersecting 18.3 g/t gold and 1.19% copper over 2.9 metres at 584 metres depth. In Zone 107, highlight hole KLUB26-915A intersected 45.5 g/t gold and 0.21% copper over 0.9 metres at 535 metres depth.
Selected recent drill intersections from Upper Beaver are set out in the composite longitudinal section below and in a table in the Appendix.
[Upper Beaver – Composite Cross and Longitudinal Sections]
Hope Bay – Potential for 400,000 to 425,000 ounces of annual gold production
In the first quarter of 2026, the Company advanced site preparations to support a potential project redevelopment, including upgrades to camp facilities, with installation of a third camp wing ongoing. During the quarter, the Company focused on completing a technical evaluation for the potential redevelopment, advancing detailed engineering to approximately 55% completion, and progressing planning and procurement activities for the upcoming sealift season, in advance of a potential redevelopment decision expected in May 2026.
In the first quarter of 2026, excavation of the Naartok East exploration ramp at Madrid advanced by 638 metres and reached a depth of 111 metres as of March 31, 2026. In 2026, the exploration ramp will continue to advance for a total of 3.3 kilometers to a depth of 185 metres to facilitate infill and expansion drilling along the Madrid zones. At Patch 7, excavation of the portal boxcut for the dedicated exploration ramp was completed and preparation for ground support activities are underway.
San Nicolás Copper Project (50/50 joint venture with Teck Resources Limited)
Regulatory decisions for the MIA-R (Environmental Impact Assessment) and ETJ (Land Use Change) permits are pending. In the first quarter of 2026, Minas de San Nicolás continued to advance engineering on critical infrastructure to increase confidence in the feasibility study, further de-risk the execution strategy and position the project for a potential sanction decision, subject to receipt of permits. As at March 31, 2026, more than 40% of engineering had been completed, with progress expected to reach approximately 50% by mid-2026.
During the quarter, drilling activities also progressed, focusing on condemnation drilling and geological evaluation near the projected mine area.
First Quarter 2026 Operating Results
Regional operating statistics and highlights for the first quarter of 2026 are set out below. See the MD&A under the caption "Financial and Operating Results" for a variance analysis on gold production, production costs, minesite costs per tonne and total cash costs per ounce compared to the prior-year period.
ABITIBI REGION, QUEBEC
First Production Achieved at East Gouldie; Strong Operational Performance at Akasaba West; Automation Initiatives Continue to Advance at LaRonde
Abitibi Quebec – Operating Statistics | ||||||||
Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 | LaRonde | Canadian
| Goldex | Consolidated
| ||||
Tonnes of ore milled (thousands) | 776 | 4,707 | 813 | 6,296 | ||||
Tonnes of ore milled per day | 8,622 | 52,300 | 9,033 | 69,955 | ||||
Gold grade (g/t) | 3.55 | 1.20 | 1.35 | 1.51 | ||||
Gold production (ounces) | 81,596 | 166,216 | 29,372 | 277,184 | ||||
Production costs per tonne (C$) | C$ 156 | C$ 38 | C$ 68 | C$ 56 | ||||
Minesite costs per tonne (C$) | C$ 175 | C$ 50 | C$ 64 | C$ 67 | ||||
Production costs per ounce | $ 1,079 | $ 782 | $ 1,362 | $ 931 | ||||
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 1,027 | $ 998 | $ 915 | $ 998 |
Regional Highlights
ABITIBI REGION, ONTARIO
Strong Production at Detour Lake Driven by Higher Grades and Strong Mill Operating Performance; Record Quarterly Mill Throughput at Macassa
Abitibi Ontario – Operating Statistics | ||||||
Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 | Detour Lake | Macassa | Consolidated
| |||
Tonnes of ore milled (thousands) | 6,748 | 149 | 6,897 | |||
Tonnes of ore milled per day | 74,978 | 1,656 | 76,634 | |||
Gold grade (g/t) | 0.90 | 11.92 | 1.14 | |||
Gold production (ounces) | 177,019 | 55,593 | 232,612 | |||
Production costs per tonne (C$) | C$ 34 | C$ 670 | C$ 48 | |||
Minesite costs per tonne (C$) | C$ 36 | C$ 660 | C$ 49 | |||
Production costs per ounce | $ 951 | $ 1,303 | $ 1,035 | |||
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 974 | $ 1,256 | $ 1,041 |
Regional Highlights
NUNAVUT
Solid Performance at Meliadine Despite Weather Conditions; Higher Grade Delivers Strong Gold Production at Meadowbank
Nunavut – Operating Statistics | ||||||
Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 | Meliadine | Meadowbank | Consolidated
| |||
Tonnes of ore milled (thousands) | 558 | 1,099 | 1,657 | |||
Tonnes of ore milled per day | 6,200 | 12,211 | 18,411 | |||
Gold grade (g/t) | 5.48 | 3.56 | 4.21 | |||
Gold production (ounces) | 93,831 | 113,862 | 207,693 | |||
Production costs per tonne (C$) | C$ 231 | C$ 230 | C$ 230 | |||
Minesite costs per tonne (C$) | C$ 270 | C$ 158 | C$ 196 | |||
Production costs per ounce | $ 997 | $ 1,613 | $ 1,335 | |||
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 1,162 | $ 1,080 | $ 1,117 |
Regional Highlights
AUSTRALIA
Strong Performance at the Phoenix Zone Drives Higher Grades and Throughput
Fosterville – Operating Statistics | Three Months Ended
| |
Tonnes of ore milled (thousands) | 216 | |
Tonnes of ore milled per day | 2,400 | |
Gold grade (g/t) | 6.31 | |
Gold production (ounces) | 41,443 | |
Production costs per tonne (A$) | A$308 | |
Minesite costs per tonne (A$) | A$316 | |
Production costs per ounce | $ 1,098 | |
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 1,123 |
Highlights
FINLAND
Optimization Initiatives Continue to Drive Strong Underground Mining Performance; Proposed CLGB Consolidation Envisions a Multi-Decade, Multi-Asset Platform
Kittila – Operating Statistics | Three Months Ended
| |
Tonnes of ore milled (thousands) | 448 | |
Tonnes of ore milled per day | 4,978 | |
Gold grade (g/t) | 4.19 | |
Gold production (ounces) | 48,527 | |
Production costs per tonne (€) | €129 | |
Minesite costs per tonne (€) | €122 | |
Production costs per ounce | $ 1,401 | |
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 1,313 |
Highlights
MEXICO
Strong Mill Throughput Driven by Solid Operational Performance at Sinter
Pinos Altos – Operating Statistics | Three Months Ended
| |
Tonnes of ore milled (thousands) | 427 | |
Tonnes of ore milled per day | 4,744 | |
Gold grade (g/t) | 1.36 | |
Gold production (ounces) | 17,650 | |
Production costs per tonne | $ 155 | |
Minesite costs per tonne | $ 136 | |
Production costs per ounce | $ 3,746 | |
Total cash costs per ounce | $ 2,311 |
About Agnico Eagle
Canadian-based and led, Agnico Eagle is Canada's largest mining company and the second largest gold producer in the world, operating mines in Canada, Australia, Finland and Mexico. The Company is advancing a pipeline of high-quality development projects in these regions to support sustainable growth over the next decade. Agnico Eagle is a partner of choice within the mining industry, recognized globally for its leading sustainability practices. Agnico Eagle was founded in 1957 and has consistently created value for its shareholders, declaring a cash dividend every year since 1983.
About this News Release
Unless otherwise stated, references to "Canadian Malartic", "Goldex", "LaRonde" and "Meadowbank" are to the Company's operations at the Canadian Malartic complex, the Goldex complex, the LaRonde complex and the Meadowbank complex, respectively. The Canadian Malartic complex consists of the mining, milling and processing operations at the Canadian Malartic mine and the mining operations at the Odyssey mine. The Goldex complex consists of the mining, milling and processing operations at the Goldex mine and the mining operations at the Akasaba West open pit mine. The LaRonde complex consists of the mining, milling and processing operations at the LaRonde mine and the mining and processing operations at LZ5. The Meadowbank complex consists of the milling and processing operations at the Meadowbank mine and the mining operations at the Amaruq open pit and underground mines. References to other operations are to the relevant mines, projects or properties, as applicable.
When used in this news release, the terms "including" and "such as" mean including and such as, without limitation.
The information contained on any website linked to or referred to herein (including the Company's website) is not part of this news release.
Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance
This news release discloses certain financial performance measures, including "total cash costs per ounce", "minesite costs per tonne", "all-in sustaining costs per ounce" (or "AISC per ounce"), "adjusted net income", "adjusted net income per share", "cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital", "cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital per share", "EBITDA" which means earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, "adjusted EBITDA", "free cash flow", "free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital", "operating margin", "capital expenditures", "sustaining capital expenditures", "development capital expenditures", "sustaining capitalized exploration", "development capitalized exploration" and "net cash (debt)", as well as, for certain of these measures their related per share ratios that are not standardized measures under IFRS Accounting Standards. These measures may not be comparable to similar measures reported by other gold producers and should be considered together with other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards. See below for a reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable financial information reported in the condensed interim consolidated financial statements for the three months ended March 31, 2026 (the "First Quarter Financial Statements") prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards. Adjustments that are not applicable in respect of the periods for which reconciliations are provided are not shown in the quantitative reconciliation.
Total Cash Costs per Ounce of Gold Produced and Minesite Costs per Tonne
Total Cash Costs per Ounce
Total cash costs per ounce is calculated on a per ounce of gold produced basis and is reported either on a by-product basis (deducting the impact of by-product metals from production costs to isolate the cost of producing an ounce of gold) and, where indicated, on a co-product basis (without deducting the impact of by-product metals). Total cash costs per ounce on a by-product basis are calculated by adjusting production costs as recorded in the First Quarter Financial Statements for (i) the impact of by-products, (ii) inventory production costs, (iii) the impact of purchase price allocation in connection with mergers and acquisitions on inventory accounting, (iv) realized gains and losses on hedges of production costs, (v) in-kind royalty costs, and (vi) smelting, refining and marketing charges and then dividing by the number of ounces of gold produced. For periods commencing on or after January 1, 2026, the Company also adjusts production costs for the NTI Payment (as discussed further below), which adjustment only affects this non-GAAP measure only insofar as the measure includes costs from Meadowbank (that is, for Meadowbank, the Nunavut region and the consolidated Company). The Company's calculation of total cash costs per ounce for other mines and regions that do not include Meadowbank are not affected by this change.
The NTI Payment is the payment to Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. ("NTI") under the Company's mineral production lease in respect of the Amaruq mine at Meadowbank, which is a royalty based on net profits, subject to a minimum profit margin ("NTI Payment"). NTI is the body that represents the Inuit of Nunavut under the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement and holds the subsurface mineral rights on certain parcels of Inuit owned land, including at the Amaruq mine. The royalty payments under the mining leases with NTI are based on net profits at the mine, subject to a cap on allowable costs as a percentage of gross revenue. At mines located on lands in Nunavut where the subsurface mineral rights are not held by NTI (whether or not on Inuit owned lands), the Crown holds the subsurface mineral rights and imposes a net profits royalty (the "Crown royalty") under the Nunavut Mining Regulations (the "NMR"). The Company does not include the Crown royalty in its calculations of total cash costs per ounce and certain other of its non-GAAP measures as the Company classifies these costs as an income tax for financial statement purposes in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards and income taxes are generally excluded from the calculation of such non-GAAP measures. The Crown royalty is not applicable where NTI is the holder of the subsurface mineral rights. Where NTI is holder of the subsurface mineral rights, the Company instead is required to make the payment under the mining leases with NTI, which the Company views as having similar characteristics to the payments under the Crown royalty. Accordingly, to ensure comparability across the Company's mines in Nunavut, the Company revised its calculation of such non-GAAP measures to also adjust for the NTI Payment where applicable. In this news release, total cash costs per ounce for periods that commenced prior to January 1, 2026 have been calculated using this revised methodology.
Investors should note that total cash costs per ounce are not reflective of all cash expenditures, as they do not include income tax payments, interest costs or dividend payments. Total cash costs per ounce on a co-product basis is calculated in the same manner as the total cash costs per ounce on a by-product basis, except that the impact of by-product metals is not deducted. Accordingly, the calculation of total cash costs per ounce on a co-product basis does not reflect a reduction in production costs or smelting, refining and marketing charges associated with the production of by-product metals.
Total cash costs per ounce is intended to provide investors information about the cash-generating capabilities of the Company's mining operations. Management also uses these measures to, and believes they are helpful to investors so investors can, understand and monitor the performance of the Company's mining operations. The Company believes that total cash costs per ounce is useful to help investors understand the costs associated with producing gold and the economics of gold mining. As market prices for gold are quoted on a per ounce basis, using the total cash costs per ounce on a by-product basis measure allows management and investors to assess a mine's cash-generating capabilities at various gold prices. Management is aware, and investors should note, that these per ounce measures of performance can be affected by fluctuations in exchange rates and, in the case of total cash costs per ounce of gold produced on a by-product basis, by-product metal prices. Management compensates for these inherent limitations by using, and investors should also consider using, these measures in conjunction with data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards and minesite costs per tonne as these measures are not necessarily indicative of operating costs or cash flow measures prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards. Management also performs sensitivity analyses in order to quantify the effects of fluctuating metal prices and exchange rates.
Agnico Eagle's primary business is gold production and the focus of its current operations and future development is on maximizing returns from gold production, with other metal production being incidental to the gold production process. Accordingly, all metals other than gold are considered by-products.
In this news release, unless otherwise indicated, total cash costs per ounce is reported on a by-product basis. Total cash costs per ounce is reported on a by-product basis because (i) gold is the Company's primary product and source of substantially all its revenues, (ii) the Company mines ore, which may contain gold, silver, zinc, copper and other metals, and the Company believes that isolating the cost of producing gold is a more meaningful measure of operating performance, (iii) it is a method used by management and the Board to monitor operations, and (iv) many other gold producers disclose similar measures on a by-product rather than a co-product basis.
Minesite Costs per Tonne
Minesite costs per tonne are calculated by adjusting production costs as recorded in the First Quarter Financial Statements for (i) inventory production costs, (ii) in-kind royalty costs, and (iii) smelting, refining and marketing charges, and then dividing by tonnage of ore processed. For periods commencing on or after January 1, 2026, the Company also adjusts production costs for the NTI Payment (as discussed above in " Total Cash Costs per Ounce "), which adjustment only affects minesite costs per tonne at Meadowbank and for the Nunavut region. The Company's calculation of minesite costs per tonne for other mines and regions other than the Nunavut region are not affected by this change. In this news release, minesite costs for periods that commenced prior to January 1, 2026 have been calculated using this revised methodology.
As the total cash costs per ounce can be affected by fluctuations in by-product metal prices and foreign exchange rates, management believes that minesite costs per tonne is useful to investors in providing additional information regarding the performance of mining operations, eliminating the impact of varying production levels. Management also uses this measure to determine the economic viability of mining blocks. As each mining block is evaluated based on the net realizable value of each tonne mined, in order to be economically viable the estimated revenue on a per tonne basis must be in excess of the minesite costs per tonne. For the reasons noted above in respect of revisions to the composition of total cash costs per ounce, for the purposes of calculating this non-GAAP measure, the Company now adjusts production costs for the amount of the NTI Payment. The Company believes that this revision is helpful to both management and investors as it better reflects the cost performance at the Amaruq mine at Meadowbank and makes the reported measure more comparable across all of the Company's mines. Management is aware, and investors should note, that this per tonne measure of performance can be affected by fluctuations in processing levels. This inherent limitation may be partially mitigated by using this measure in conjunction with production costs and other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
The following table sets out the production costs per minesite for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025, as presented in the First Quarter Financial Statements in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
Total Production Costs by Mine | |||
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
(thousands of United States dollars) | 2026 | 2025 | |
LaRonde | 88,008 | 86,644 | |
Canadian Malartic | 129,946 | 119,289 | |
Goldex | 39,999 | 34,656 | |
Quebec | 257,953 | 240,589 | |
Detour Lake | 168,379 | 134,946 | |
Macassa | 72,465 | 49,826 | |
Ontario | 240,844 | 184,772 | |
Meliadine | 93,559 | 83,822 | |
Meadowbank | 183,615 | 126,967 | |
Nunavut | 277,174 | 210,789 | |
Fosterville | 45,493 | 33,040 | |
Australia | 45,493 | 33,040 | |
Kittila | 68,009 | 55,833 | |
Finland | 68,009 | 55,833 | |
Pinos Altos | 66,114 | 42,710 | |
Mexico | 66,114 | 42,710 | |
Production costs per the First Quarter Financial Statements | $ 955,587 | $ 767,733 | |
The following tables set out a reconciliation of total cash costs per ounce (on both a by-product basis and co-product basis) and minesite costs per tonne to production costs for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025, exclusive of amortization, as presented in the First Quarter Financial Statements in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
Reconciliation of Production Costs to Total Cash Costs per Ounce by Mine | ||||||||||
Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 | ||||||||||
(United States dollars in thousands, except per ounce measures or as otherwise noted) | ||||||||||
Mine | Payable
| Production
| Production
| Inventory
| Realized
| In-kind
| Smelting,
| Total cash
| Impact of
| Total cash
|
LaRonde | 81,596 | 88,008 | 1,079 | 17,164 | (323) | — | 3,271 | 1,325 | (24,299) | 1,027 |
Canadian Malartic | 166,216 | 129,946 | 782 | 4,777 | (705) | 37,309 | 945 | 1,036 | (6,462) | 998 |
Goldex | 29,372 | 39,999 | 1,362 | (1,852) | (119) | — | 1,052 | 1,331 | (12,217) | 915 |
Quebec | 277,184 | 257,953 | 931 | 20,089 | (1,147) | 37,309 | 5,268 | 1,153 | (42,978) | 998 |
Detour Lake | 177,019 | 168,379 | 951 | (9,663) | (1,032) | 17,369 | 921 | 994 | (3,531) | 974 |
Macassa | 55,593 | 72,465 | 1,303 | (7,071) | (303) | 5,929 | 59 | 1,279 | (1,264) | 1,256 |
Ontario | 232,612 | 240,844 | 1,035 | (16,734) | (1,335) | 23,298 | 980 | 1,062 | (4,795) | 1,041 |
Meliadine | 93,831 | 93,559 | 997 | 16,333 | (370) | — | 136 | 1,169 | (631) | 1,162 |
Meadowbank | 113,862 | 183,615 | 1,613 | (6,070) | (460) | (51,283) | 160 | 1,106 | (3,022) | 1,080 |
Nunavut | 207,693 | 277,174 | 1,335 | 10,263 | (830) | (51,283) | 296 | 1,134 | (3,653) | 1,117 |
Fosterville | 41,443 | 45,493 | 1,098 | 1,781 | (814) | — | 68 | 1,123 | — | 1,123 |
Australia | 41,443 | 45,493 | 1,098 | 1,781 | (814) | — | 68 | 1,123 | — | 1,123 |
Kittila | 48,527 | 68,009 | 1,401 | (4,052) | (11) | — | (27) | 1,317 | (187) | 1,313 |
Finland | 48,527 | 68,009 | 1,401 | (4,052) | (11) | — | (27) | 1,317 | (187) | 1,313 |
Pinos Altos | 17,650 | 66,114 | 3,746 | (7,244) | (876) | — | 1,100 | 3,348 | (18,313) | 2,311 |
Mexico | 17,650 | 66,114 | 3,746 | (7,244) | (876) | — | 1,100 | 3,348 | (18,313) | 2,311 |
Consolidated | 825,109 | 955,587 | 1,158 | 4,103 | (5,013) | 9,324 | 7,685 | 1,178 | (69,926) | 1,093 |
Notes: | |
(i) | Gold production for the period ended March 31, 2026 excludes 418 ounces of payable production of gold at La India and 76 ounces of payable production of gold at Creston Mascota , which were produced from residual leaching. |
(ii) | Under the Company's revenue recognition policy, revenue from contracts with customers is recognized upon the transfer of control over metals sold to the customer. As the total cash costs per ounce are calculated on a production basis, an inventory adjustment is made to reflect the portion of production not yet recognized as revenue. Included in inventory adjustments for Canadian Malartic for the three months ended March 31, 2026 is $3.6 million associated with the fair value allocated to inventory on Canadian Malartic as part of the purchase price allocation from the acquisition, on March 31, 2023, of the 50% of Canadian Malartic that Agnico Eagle did not then hold. |
(iii) | In‑kind royalty adjustments in respect of Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa related to in‑kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines, which are excluded from production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and added back in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce. NTI Payments are incurred solely at Meadowbank and are included in production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and subtracted from production costs in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce as described more fully above. For a discussion of NTI Payments, see " Total Cash Costs per Ounce ". |
Three Months Ended March 31, 2025 | ||||||||||
(United States dollars in thousands, except per ounce measures or as otherwise noted) | ||||||||||
Mine | Payable
| Production
| Production
| Inventory
| Realized
| In-kind
| Smelting,
| Total cash
| Impact of
| Total cash
|
LaRonde | 91,491 | 86,644 | 947 | (4,748) | 713 | — | 2,779 | 933 | (17,222) | 745 |
Canadian Malartic | 159,773 | 119,289 | 747 | 5,395 | 1,136 | 24,588 | 270 | 943 | (2,589) | 927 |
Goldex | 30,016 | 34,656 | 1,155 | 108 | 301 | — | 967 | 1,200 | (7,249) | 959 |
Quebec | 281,280 | 240,589 | 855 | 755 | 2,150 | 24,588 | 4,016 | 967 | (27,060) | 871 |
Detour Lake | 152,838 | 134,946 | 883 | (364) | 878 | 8,700 | 1,303 | 952 | (888) | 946 |
Macassa | 86,028 | 49,826 | 579 | 1,864 | 719 | 3,534 | 87 | 651 | (501) | 645 |
Ontario | 238,866 | 184,772 | 774 | 1,500 | 1,597 | 12,234 | 1,390 | 844 | (1,389) | 838 |
Meliadine | 98,512 | 83,822 | 851 | 5,859 | 892 | — | 84 | 920 | — | 920 |
Meadowbank | 140,126 | 126,967 | 906 | (1,663) | 1,158 | (7,418) | 35 | 850 | (750) | 844 |
Nunavut | 238,638 | 210,789 | 883 | 4,196 | 2,050 | (7,418) | 119 | 879 | (750) | 876 |
Fosterville | 43,615 | 33,040 | 758 | 2,520 | — | — | 16 | 816 | (114) | 813 |
Australia | 43,615 | 33,040 | 758 | 2,520 | — | — | 16 | 816 | (114) | 813 |
Kittila | 54,104 | 55,833 | 1,032 | (1,106) | 174 | — | (56) | 1,014 | (113) | 1,012 |
Finland | 54,104 | 55,833 | 1,032 | (1,106) | 174 | — | (56) | 1,014 | (113) | 1,012 |
Pinos Altos | 17,291 | 42,710 | 2,470 | 2,200 | 114 | — | 259 | 2,619 | (7,762) | 2,170 |
Mexico | 17,291 | 42,710 | 2,470 | 2,200 | 114 | — | 259 | 2,619 | (7,762) | 2,170 |
Consolidated | 873,794 | 767,733 | 879 | 10,065 | 6,085 | 29,404 | 5,744 | 938 | (37,188) | 895 |
Notes: | |
(i) | Gold production for the three months ended March 31, 2025 excludes 1,811 ounces of payable production of gold at La India and 25 ounces of payable production of gold at Creston Mascota, which were produced from residual leaching. |
(ii) | Under the Company's revenue recognition policy, revenue from contracts with customers is recognized upon the transfer of control over metals sold to the customer. As the total cash costs per ounce are calculated on a production basis, an inventory adjustment is made to reflect the portion of production not yet recognized as revenue. Included in inventory adjustments for Canadian Malartic for the three months ended March 31, 2025 is $1.1 million associated with the fair value allocated to inventory on Canadian Malartic as part of the purchase price allocation from the acquisition, on March 31, 2023, of the 50% of Canadian Malartic that Agnico Eagle did not then hold. |
(iii) | In‑kind royalty adjustments in respect of Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa related to in‑kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines, which are excluded from production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and added back in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce. NTI Payments are incurred solely at Meadowbank and are included in production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and subtracted from production costs in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce as described more fully above. For a discussion of NTI Payments, see " Total Cash Costs per Ounce ". |
Reconciliation of Production Costs to Minesite Costs per Tonne by Mine | ||||||||
Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 | ||||||||
(thousands, except per tonne measures or as otherwise noted) | ||||||||
Mine | Tonnes of
| Production
| Production
| Local
| Inventory
| In-kind
| Smelting,
| Local
|
LaRonde | 776 | $ 88,008 | C$ 121,027 | C$ 156 | C$ 23,633 | C$ — | C$ (9,224) | C$ 175 |
Canadian Malartic | 4,707 | $ 129,946 | C$ 178,822 | C$ 38 | C$ 1,444 | C$ 51,224 | C$ 4,986 | C$ 50 |
Goldex | 813 | $ 39,999 | C$ 55,053 | C$ 68 | C$ (2,653) | C$ — | C$ — | C$ 64 |
Quebec | 6,296 | $ 257,953 | C$ 354,902 | C$ 56 | C$ 22,424 | C$ 51,224 | C$ (4,238) | C$ 67 |
Detour Lake | 6,748 | $ 168,379 | C$ 231,062 | C$ 34 | C$ (13,326) | C$ 23,834 | C$ — | C$ 36 |
Macassa | 149 | $ 72,465 | C$ 99,773 | C$ 670 | C$ (9,684) | C$ 8,208 | C$ — | C$ 660 |
Ontario | 6,897 | $ 240,844 | C$ 330,835 | C$ 48 | C$ (23,010) | C$ 32,042 | C$ — | C$ 49 |
Meliadine | 558 | $ 93,559 | C$ 128,710 | C$ 231 | C$ 22,173 | C$ — | C$ — | C$ 270 |
Meadowbank | 1,099 | $ 183,615 | C$ 252,761 | C$ 230 | C$ (8,366) | C$ (70,816) | C$ — | C$ 158 |
Nunavut | 1,657 | $ 277,174 | C$ 381,471 | C$ 230 | C$ 13,807 | C$ (70,816) | C$ — | C$ 196 |
Fosterville | 216 | $ 45,493 | A$ 66,470 | A$ 308 | A$ 1,871 | A$ — | A$ — | A$ 316 |
Australia | 216 | $ 45,493 | A$ 66,470 | A$ 308 | A$ 1,871 | A$ — | A$ — | A$ 316 |
Kittila | 448 | $ 68,009 | € 57,890 | € 129 | € (3,365) | € — | € — | € 122 |
Finland | 448 | $ 68,009 | € 57,890 | € 129 | € (3,365) | € — | € — | € 122 |
Pinos Altos | 427 | $ 66,114 | $ 66,114 | $ 155 | $ (8,119) | $ — | $ — | $ 136 |
Mexico | 427 | $ 66,114 | $ 66,114 | $ 155 | $ (8,119) | $ — | $ — | $ 136 |
Notes: | |
(i) | This inventory adjustment reflects production costs associated with the portion of production still in inventory. Included in inventory adjustments for Canadian Malartic for the three months ended March 31, 2026 is C$5.0 million associated with the fair value allocated to inventory on Canadian Malartic as part of the purchase price allocation from the acquisition, on March 31, 2023, of the 50% of Canadian Malartic that Agnico Eagle did not then hold. |
(ii) | In‑kind royalty adjustments in respect of Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa related to in‑kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines, which are excluded from production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and added back in the calculation of minesite costs per tonne. NTI Payments are incurred solely at Meadowbank and are included in production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and subtracted from production costs in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce as described more fully above. For a discussion of NTI Payments, see " Minesite Costs per Tonne ". |
Three Months Ended March 31, 2025 | ||||||||
(thousands, except per tonne measures or as otherwise noted) | ||||||||
Mine | Tonnes of
| Production
| Production
| Production
| Inventory
| In-kind
| Smelting,
| Minesite
|
LaRonde | 675 | $ 86,644 | C$ 123,759 | C$ 183 | C$ (6,151) | C$ — | C$ (6,147) | C$ 165 |
Canadian Malartic | 4,865 | $ 119,289 | C$ 169,263 | C$ 35 | C$ 7,950 | C$ 35,400 | C$ — | C$ 44 |
Goldex | 792 | $ 34,656 | C$ 49,499 | C$ 63 | C$ 331 | C$ — | C$ — | C$ 63 |
Quebec | 6,332 | $ 240,589 | C$ 342,521 | C$ 54 | C$ 2,130 | C$ 35,400 | C$(6,147) | C$ 59 |
Detour Lake | 6,630 | $ 134,946 | C$ 191,633 | C$ 29 | C$ 13 | C$ 12,555 | C$ — | C$ 31 |
Macassa | 148 | $ 49,826 | C$ 71,459 | C$ 483 | C$ 2,692 | C$ 5,108 | C$ — | C$ 536 |
Ontario | 6,778 | $ 184,772 | C$ 263,092 | C$ 39 | C$ 2,705 | C$ 17,663 | C$ — | C$ 42 |
Meliadine | 558 | $ 83,822 | C$ 118,780 | C$ 213 | C$ 8,727 | C$ — | C$ — | C$ 229 |
Meadowbank | 1,037 | $ 126,967 | C$ 179,936 | C$ 174 | C$ (2,425) | C$ (10,697) | C$ — | C$ 161 |
Nunavut | 1,595 | $ 210,789 | C$ 298,716 | C$ 187 | C$ 6,302 | C$ (10,697) | C$ — | C$ 185 |
Fosterville | 163 | $ 33,040 | A$ 51,973 | A$ 319 | A$ 4,181 | A$ — | A$ — | A$ 345 |
Australia | 163 | $ 33,040 | A$ 51,973 | A$ 319 | A$ 4,181 | A$ — | A$ — | A$ 345 |
Kittila | 522 | $ 55,833 | € 53,143 | € 102 | € (1,362) | € — | € — | € 99 |
Finland | 522 | $ 55,833 | € 53,143 | € 102 | € (1,362) | € — | € — | € 99 |
Pinos Altos | 381 | $ 42,710 | $ 42,710 | $ 112 | $ 2,314 | $ — | $ — | $ 118 |
Mexico | 381 | $ 42,710 | $ 42,710 | $ 112 | $ 2,314 | $ — | $ — | $ 118 |
Notes: | |
(i) | This inventory adjustment reflects production costs associated with the portion of production still in inventory. Included in inventory adjustments for Canadian Malartic for the three months ended March 31, 2025 is C$1.5 million associated with the fair value allocated to inventory on Canadian Malartic as part of the purchase price allocation from the acquisition, on March 31, 2023, of the 50% of Canadian Malartic that Agnico Eagle did not then hold. |
(ii) | In‑kind royalty adjustments in respect of Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa related to in‑kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines, which are excluded from production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and added back in the calculation of minesite costs per tonne. NTI Payments are incurred solely at Meadowbank and are included in production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and subtracted from production costs in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce as described more fully above. For a discussion of NTI Payments, see " Minesite Costs per Tonne ". |
All-in sustaining costs per ounce
All-in sustaining costs per ounce (also referred to as "AISC per ounce") on a by-product basis is calculated as the aggregate of (i) total cash costs on a by-product basis, (ii) sustaining capital expenditures (including capitalized exploration), (iii) general and administrative expenses (including stock option expense), (iv) lease payments related to sustaining assets and (v) reclamation expenses, each as measured on a per ounce of production basis. These additional costs reflect the additional expenditures that are required to be made to maintain current production levels. AISC per ounce on a co-product basis is calculated in the same manner as AISC per ounce on a by-product basis, except that the total cash costs on a co-product basis are used, meaning the impact of by-product metals is not deducted. Investors should note that AISC per ounce is not reflective of all cash expenditures as it does not include income tax payments, interest costs or dividend payments, nor does it include non-cash expenditures, such as depreciation and amortization. In this news release, unless otherwise indicated, all-in sustaining costs per ounce is reported on a by-product basis (see "Total Cash Costs per Ounce" for a discussion of regarding the Company's use of by-product basis reporting). For periods commencing on or after January 1, 2026, the Company revised the composition of certain of its non-GAAP performance measures, including "all-in sustaining costs per ounce", to adjust for the NTI Payments, that is, payments made to NTI under the Company's mineral production leases in respect of the Amaruq mine at Meadowbank. This revised composition aligns with changes made to the calculation of "total cash costs per ounce", discussed above in " Total Cash Costs per Ounce ". For the reasons outlined above in respect of the change to the composition of "total cash costs per ounce", the Company believes that this revision to the composition of AISC per ounce is helpful to both management and investors as it better reflects the cost performance at the Amaruq mine at Meadowbank and conforms the calculations of costs used across all of the Company's mines.
Management believes that AISC per ounce is useful to investors as it reflects total sustaining expenditures of producing and selling an ounce of gold while maintaining current operations and, as such, provides useful information about operating performance. Management is aware, and investors should note, that these per ounce measures of performance can be affected by fluctuations in foreign exchange rates and, in the case of AISC per ounce on a by-product basis, by-product metal prices. Management compensates for these inherent limitations by using, and investors should also consider using, these measures in conjunction with data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards and minesite costs per tonne, as this measure is not necessarily indicative of operating costs or cash flow measures prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
The Company follows the guidance on calculation of AISC per ounce released by the World Gold Council ("WGC") in 2018, except in aspect of its treatment of the NTI Payment at Meadowbank. As discussed above, the Company views the NTI Payments as having similar characteristics to the Crown royalty, which is treated as income tax under IFRS Accounting Standards and therefore excluded from the Company's AISC calculations. The WGC is a non-regulatory market development organization for the gold industry that has worked closely with its member companies to develop guidance in respect of relevant non-GAAP measures. Notwithstanding the Company's adoption of the WGC's guidance, AISC per ounce reported by the Company may not be comparable to data reported by other gold mining companies.
The following table sets out a reconciliation of production costs to all-in sustaining costs per ounce for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025 on both a by-product basis (deducting the impact of by-product metals from production costs) and a co-product basis (without deducting the impact of by-product metals from production costs).
(UnitedStates dollars per ounce, except where noted) | Three Months Ended March 31, | ||
2026 | 2025 | ||
Production costs per the First Quarter Financial Statements (thousands of United States dollars) | $ 955,587 | $ 767,733 | |
Gold production (ounces) (i) | 825,109 | 873,794 | |
Production costs per ounce | $ 1,158 | $ 879 | |
Adjustments: | |||
Inventory adjustments (ii) | 6 | 11 | |
In-kind royalty and NTI Payments (iii) | 11 | 34 | |
Realized gains and losses on hedges of production costs | (6) | 7 | |
Smelting, refining, and marketing charges | 9 | 7 | |
Total cash costs per ounce (co-product basis) | $ 1,178 | $ 938 | |
Impact of by-product metals | (85) | (43) | |
Total cash costs per ounce (by-product basis) | $ 1,093 | $ 895 | |
Adjustments: | |||
Sustaining capital expenditures (including capitalized exploration) | 243 | 196 | |
General and administrative expenses (including stock option expense) | 94 | 69 | |
Non-cash reclamation provision and sustaining leases (iv) | 53 | 15 | |
All-in sustaining costs per ounce (by-product basis) | $ 1,483 | $ 1,175 | |
Impact of by-product metals | 85 | 43 | |
All-in sustaining costs per ounce (co-product basis) | $ 1,568 | $ 1,218 | |
Notes: |
(i) Gold production for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and 2025 excludes 418 ounces and 1,811 ounces of payable production of gold at La India and 76 ounces and 25 ounces of payable production at Creston Mascota, respectively, which were produced from residual leaching |
(ii) Under the Company's revenue recognition policy, revenue from contracts with customers is recognized upon the transfer of control over metals sold to the customer. As the total cash costs per ounce of gold produced are calculated on a production basis, an inventory adjustment is made to reflect the portion of production not yet recognized as revenue. Included in inventory adjustments for Canadian Malartic is $3.6 million and $1.1 million for the three months ended March 31 2026 and 2025 respectively, associated with the fair value allocated to inventory on Canadian Malartic as part of the purchase price allocation from the acquisition, on March 31, 2023, of the 50% of Canadian Malartic that Agnico Eagle did not then hold |
(iii) In‑kind royalty adjustments in respect of Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa related to in‑kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines, which are excluded from production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and added back in the calculation of all-in sustaining costs per ounce. NTI Payments are incurred solely at Meadowbank and are included in production costs under IFRS Accounting Standards and subtracted from production costs in the calculation of total cash costs per ounce as described more fully above. For a discussion of NTI Payments, see " Total Cash Costs per Ounce " |
(iv) Sustaining leases are lease payments related to sustaining assets |
Adjusted net income
Adjusted net income is calculated by adjusting the net income as recorded in the First Quarter Financial Statements for the effects of certain items that the Company believes are not reflective of the Company's underlying performance for the reporting period. Adjusted net income is calculated by adjusting net income for certain non-recurring, unusual and other items such as foreign currency translation gains or losses, realized and unrealized gains or losses on derivative financial instruments, severance, transaction costs related to acquisitions, revaluation gains and losses, environmental remediation charges, gains or losses on the disposal of assets, purchase price allocations to inventory, debt extinguishment costs, impairment loss charges and reversals, gains and losses on the sale of equity securities, retroactive payments, self insurance losses, gains and losses on the sale of non-strategic properties, multi-year donations, disposal of supplies inventory at non-operating sites, and income and mining taxes adjustments. Adjusted net income per share is calculated by dividing adjusted net income by the weighted average number of shares outstanding on a basic and diluted basis.
The Company believes that these generally accepted industry measures are useful to investors in that they allow for the evaluation of the results of continuing operations and in making comparisons between periods. Adjusted net income and adjusted net income per share are intended to provide investors with information about the Company's continuing income generating capabilities from its core mining business, excluding the above adjustments, which the Company believes are not reflective of operational performance. Management uses this measure to, and believes it is useful to investors so they can, understand and monitor for the operating performance of the Company in conjunction with other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
The following table sets out the calculation of adjusted net income for the three months ended March 31, 2026, and March 31, 2025.
Three Months Ended
| |||
(thousands) | 2026 | 2025 | |
Net income for the period | $ 1,695,461 | $ 814,731 | |
Foreign currency translation gain | (733) | (60) | |
Gain on derivative financial instruments | (4,700) | (68,859) | |
Environmental remediation | 13,970 | 7,730 | |
Net loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment | 10,239 | 5,646 | |
Purchase price allocation to inventory (i) | (3,641) | 1,068 | |
Impairment loss (ii) | — | 10,554 | |
Income and mining taxes adjustments (iii) | (4,840) | (703) | |
Adjusted net income for the period | $ 1,705,756 | $ 770,107 | |
Notes: |
(i) As part of the purchase price allocation in a business combination, the Company is required to determine the fair value of net assets acquired. The fair value of inventory acquired is estimated based on the selling cost less costs to be incurred plus a profit margin on those costs resulting in a fair value adjustment to the carrying value of inventories acquired. These non-cash fair value adjustments which affected the cost of inventory sold during the period and are not representative of ongoing operations, were removed from net income in the calculation of adjusted net income |
(ii) Relates to the Company's ownership percentage of an impairment loss recorded by an associate |
(iii) Income and mining taxes adjustments reflect items such as foreign currency translation recorded to the income and mining taxes expense, the impact of income and mining taxes on adjusted items, recognition of previously unrecognized capital losses, the result of income and mining taxes audits, impact of tax law changes and adjustments to prior period tax filings |
EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA
EBITDA is calculated by adjusting net income for finance costs, amortization of property, plant and mine development and income and mining tax expense line items as reported in the First Quarter Financial Statements.
Adjusted EBITDA removes the effects of certain items that the Company believes are not reflective of the Company's underlying performance for the reporting period. Adjusted EBITDA is calculated by adjusting the EBITDA calculation for certain non-recurring, unusual and other items such as foreign currency translation gains or losses, realized and unrealized gains or losses on derivative financial instruments, severance, non-recurring, unusual and other transaction costs related to acquisitions, revaluation gains and losses, environmental remediation, gains or losses on the disposal of assets, purchase price allocations to inventory, debt extinguishment costs, impairment loss charges and reversals, gains and losses on the sale of equity securities, retroactive payments, self insurance losses, gains and losses on the sale of non-strategic properties, multi-year donations, and disposal of supplies inventory at non-operating sites.
The Company believes that these generally accepted industry measures are useful in that they allow for the evaluation of the cash-generating capability of the Company to fund its working capital, capital expenditure and debt repayments. EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA are intended to provide investors with information about the Company's continuing cash-generating capability from its core mining business, excluding the above adjustments, which management believes are not reflective of operational performance. Management uses these measures to, and believes it is useful to investors so they can, understand and monitor the cash-generating capability of the Company in conjunction with other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
The following table sets out the calculation of EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025.
Three Months Ended
| |||
(thousands) | 2026 | 2025 | |
Net income for the period | $ 1,695,461 | $ 814,731 | |
Finance costs | 15,756 | 22,444 | |
Amortization of property, plant and mine development | 420,266 | 416,800 | |
Income and mining tax expense | 864,163 | 379,840 | |
EBITDA | 2,995,646 | 1,633,815 | |
Foreign currency translation gain | (733) | (60) | |
Gain on derivative financial instruments | (4,700) | (68,859) | |
Environmental remediation | 13,970 | 7,730 | |
Net loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment | 10,239 | 5,646 | |
Purchase price allocation to inventory (i) | (3,641) | 1,068 | |
Impairment loss (ii) | — | 10,554 | |
Adjusted EBITDA | $ 3,010,781 | $ 1,589,894 | |
Notes: |
(i) As part of the purchase price allocation in a business combination, the Company is required to determine the fair value of net assets acquired. The fair value of inventory acquired is estimated based on the selling cost less costs to be incurred plus a profit margin on those costs resulting in a fair value adjustment to the carrying value of inventories acquired. These non-cash fair value adjustments which affected the cost of inventory sold during the period and are not representative of ongoing operations, were removed from net income in the calculation of adjusted net income |
(ii) Relates to the Company's ownership percentage of an impairment loss recorded by an associate |
Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital and its per share ratio
Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital is calculated by adjusting the cash provided by operating activities as shown in the First Quarter Financial Statements for the effects of changes in non-cash components of working capital such as income taxes, inventories, other current assets, accounts payable and accrued liabilities and interest payable. The per share ratio is calculated by dividing cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital by the weighted average number of shares outstanding on a basic basis. The Company believes that changes in working capital can be volatile due to numerous factors, including the timing of payments. Management uses these measures to, and believes they are useful to investors so they can, assess the underlying operating cash flow performance and future operating cash flow generating capabilities of the Company in conjunction with other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards. A reconciliation of these measures to the nearest IFRS Accounting Standards measure is provided below.
Free cash flow and free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital
Free cash flow is calculated by deducting additions to property, plant and mine development from the cash provided by operating activities line item as recorded in the First Quarter Financial Statements.
Free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital is calculated by excluding items such as the effect of changes in non-cash components of working capital from free cash flow, which includes income taxes, inventory, other current assets, accounts payable and accrued liabilities and interest payable.
The Company believes that these generally accepted industry measures are useful in that they allow for the evaluation of the Company's ability to repay creditors and return cash to shareholders without relying on external sources of funding. Free cash flow and free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital also provide investors with information about the Company's financial position and its ability to generate cash to fund operational and capital requirements as well as return cash to shareholders. Management uses these measures in conjunction with other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards to, and believes it is useful to investors so they can, understand and monitor the cash-generating ability of the Company.
The following table sets out the calculation of free cash flow and free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025.
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
(thousands, except where noted) | 2026 | 2025 | |
Cash provided by operating activities | $ 1,345,868 | $ 1,044,246 | |
Additions to property, plant and mine development | (613,749) | (450,124) | |
Free cash flow | 732,119 | 594,122 | |
Changes in income taxes | 989,080 | 176,739 | |
Changes in inventory | (36,800) | (30,917) | |
Changes in other current assets | 11,014 | (31,390) | |
Changes in accounts payable and accrued liabilities | (77,800) | 50,712 | |
Free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital | $ 1,617,613 | $ 759,266 | |
Additions to property, plant and mine development | 613,749 | 450,124 | |
Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital | $ 2,231,362 | $ 1,209,390 | |
Cash provided by operating activities per share - basic | $ 2.69 | $ 2.08 | |
Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital per share - basic | $ 4.46 | $ 2.41 | |
Free cash flow per share - basic | $ 1.46 | $ 1.18 | |
Free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital per share - basic | $ 3.23 | $ 1.51 |
Operating margin
Operating margin is calculated by deducting production costs from revenue from mining operations. In order to reconcile operating margin to net income as recorded in the First Quarter Financial Statements, the Company adds the following items to the operating margin: amortization of property, plant and mine development; exploration and corporate development expenses; general and administrative expenses; finance costs; gain (loss) on derivative financial instruments; foreign currency translation (gain) loss; care and maintenance expenses; other income and expenses; income and mining taxes expense; revaluation gain and impairment losses (reversals). The Company believes that operating margin is a helpful measure to investors as it reflects the operating performance of its individual mines associated with the ongoing production and sale of gold and by-product metals without allocating Company-wide overhead, such as amortization of property, plant and mine development, exploration and corporate development expenses, general and administrative expenses, finance costs, gains and losses on derivative financial instruments, foreign currency translation gains and losses, care and maintenance expenses, other income and expenses and income and mining taxes expense. Management uses this measure internally to plan and forecast future operating results. Management believes this measure is helpful to investors as it provides them with additional information about the Company's underlying operating results, though it should be evaluated in conjunction with other data prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards.
The following table sets out the calculation of operating margin for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025.
Three Months Ended
| |||
(thousands) | 2026 | 2025 | |
Net income for the period | $ 1,695,461 | $ 814,731 | |
Amortization of property, plant and mine development | 420,266 | 416,800 | |
Exploration and corporate development | 52,556 | 41,805 | |
General and administrative | 77,850 | 60,709 | |
Finance costs | 15,756 | 22,444 | |
Gain on derivative financial instruments | (4,700) | (68,859) | |
Foreign currency translation gain | (733) | (60) | |
Care and maintenance | 22,596 | 13,901 | |
Other income and expenses | 787 | 19,204 | |
Income and mining taxes expense | 864,163 | 379,840 | |
Operating margin | $ 3,144,002 | $ 1,700,515 |
Capital expenditures
Capital expenditures are calculated by deducting working capital adjustments from additions to property, plant and mine development per the First Quarter Financial Statements.
Capital expenditures are classified into sustaining capital expenditures, sustaining capitalized exploration, development capital expenditures and development capitalized exploration. Sustaining capital expenditures and sustaining capitalized exploration are expenditures incurred during the production phase to sustain and maintain existing assets so they can achieve constant expected levels of production from which the Company will derive economic benefits. Sustaining capital expenditures and sustaining capitalized exploration include expenditure for assets to retain their existing productive capacity as well as to enhance performance and reliability of the operations. Development capital expenditures and development capitalized exploration represent the spending at new projects and/or expenditures at existing operations that are undertaken with the intention to increase production levels or mine life above the current plans. Management uses these measures in the capital allocation process and to assess the effectiveness of its investments. Management believes these measures are useful so investors can assess the purpose and effectiveness of the capital expenditures split between sustaining and development in each reporting period. The classification between sustaining and development capital expenditures does not have a standardized definition in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards and other companies may classify expenditures in a different manner.
The following table sets out a reconciliation of sustaining capital expenditures, sustaining capitalized exploration, development capital expenditures and development capitalized exploration to the additions to property, plant and mine development per the First Quarter Financial Statements for the three months ended March 31, 2026 and March 31, 2025.
(thousands) | Three Months Ended
| ||
2026 | 2025 | ||
Sustaining capital expenditures | $ 196,592 | $ 168,076 | |
Sustaining capitalized exploration | 5,387 | 4,448 | |
Development capital expenditures | 292,290 | 186,224 | |
Development capitalized exploration | 79,341 | 60,504 | |
Total Capital Expenditures | $ 573,610 | $ 419,252 | |
Working capital adjustments | 40,139 | 30,872 | |
Additions to property, plant and mine development per the First Quarter Financial Statements | $ 613,749 | $ 450,124 | |
Net cash
Net cash is calculated by adjusting the total of the current portion of long-term debt and non-current long-term debt for deferred financing costs, less cash and cash equivalents, as recorded in the First Quarter Financial Statements. Management believes that net cash is a useful measure to help investors assess the Company's overall liquidity position, ability to meet its financial obligations, fund capital expenditures, advance growth projects and return capital to shareholders after considering outstanding debt obligations.
The following table sets out a reconciliation of long-term debt per the First Quarter Financial Statements to net cash as at March 31, 2026, and December 31, 2025.
As at | As at | ||
(thousands) | Mar 31, 2026 | Dec 31, 2025 | |
Long-term debt | $ (196,548) | $ (196,271) | |
Cash and cash equivalents | 3,111,869 | 2,866,053 | |
Net cash | $ 2,915,321 | $ 2,669,782 |
Forward-Looking Non-GAAP Measures
This news release contains information regarding estimated future total cash costs per ounce, minesite costs per tonne and AISC per ounce. The estimates are based upon the total cash costs per ounce, minesite costs per tonne and AISC per ounce that the Company expects to incur to mine gold at its mining operations and do not include certain costs that will vary over time as each project is developed and mined. It is therefore not practicable to reconcile these forward-looking non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable IFRS Accounting Standards measure.
Forward-Looking Statements
The information in this news release has been prepared as at April 30, 2026. Certain statements contained in this news release constitute "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and "forward-looking information" under the provisions of Canadian provincial securities laws and are referred to herein as "forward-looking statements". All statements, other than statements of historical fact, that address circumstances, events, activities or developments that could, or may or will occur are forward-looking statements. When used in this news release, the words "achieve", "aim", "anticipate", "commit", "could", "envisions", "estimate", "expect", "forecast", "future", "guide", "objective", "plan", "potential", "schedule", "target", "track", "will", and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Such statements include the Company's forward-looking guidance, including metal production (including the weighting thereof within 2026), estimated ore grades, recovery rates, project timelines, drilling targets or results, life of mine estimates, total cash costs per ounce, AISC per ounce, other expenses and cash flows; the potential for additional gold production at the Company's sites, including the potential to increase annual gold production by 20% to 30% over the next decade, exceeding four million ounces by the early 2030s; the estimated timing and conclusions of the Company's studies and evaluations; the methods by which ore will be extracted or processed; the Company's plans at Detour Lake underground, Upper Beaver, Odyssey, Hope Bay and San Nicolás, including the approval, timing, funding, completion and commissioning thereof and the commencement of production therefrom; statements concerning the Company's "fill-the-mill" strategy at Canadian Malartic; statements concerning the proposed transactions with Rupert and Aurion, and the acquisition of 70% of Fingold Ventures Ltd., including the potential benefits thereof; statements concerning other expansion projects, recovery rates, mill throughput, optimization efforts and projected exploration, including costs and other estimates upon which such projections are based; timing and amounts of capital expenditures, other expenditures and other cash needs, and expectations as to the funding thereof; estimates of future mineral reserves, mineral resources, mineral production and sales; the projected development of certain ore deposits, including estimates of exploration, development, production, closure and other capital expenditures and estimates of the timing of such exploration, development, production and closure or decisions with respect to such exploration, development, production and closure; estimates of mineral reserves and mineral resources and the effect of drill results and studies on future mineral reserves and mineral resources; the Company's ability to obtain the necessary permits and authorizations in connection with its proposed or current exploration, development and mining operations, and the anticipated timing or submission or receipt thereof; future exploration; the anticipated timing of events with respect to the Company's mine sites; the Company's plans and strategies with respect to sustainability initiatives; the sufficiency of the Company's cash resources; the Company's plans with respect to hedging and the effectiveness of its hedging strategies and the economic impact thereof; future activity with respect to the Company's unsecured revolving bank credit facility and other indebtedness; future dividend amounts, record dates and payment dates; the effect of tariffs, trade restrictions and the effect of geopolitical events on the Company, whether through availability of inputs or inflation; plans with respect to activity under the NCIB and the renewal thereof, including the anticipated increase in the purchase limit; and anticipated trends with respect to the Company's operations, exploration and the funding thereof. Such statements reflect the Company's views as at the date of this news release and are subject to certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions, and undue reliance should not be placed on such statements. Forward-looking statements are necessarily based upon a number of factors and assumptions that, while considered reasonable by Agnico Eagle as of the date of such statements, are inherently subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies. The material factors and assumptions used in the preparation of the forward-looking statements contained herein, which may prove to be incorrect, include, but are not limited to, the assumptions set forth herein and in management's discussion and analysis for the year ended December 31, 2025 (the "2025 MD&A") and the Company's Annual Information Form (the "AIF") for the year ended December 31, 2025 filed with Canadian securities regulators and that are included in its Annual Report on Form 40-F for the year ended December 31, 2025 (the "Form 40-F") filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") as well as: that there are no significant disruptions affecting operations; that production, permitting, development, expansion and the ramp-up of operations at each of Agnico Eagle's properties proceeds on a basis consistent with current expectations and plans; that the Company's plans for its mining operations are not changed or amended in a material way; that the relevant metal prices, foreign exchange rates and prices for key mining and construction inputs (including labour and electricity) will be consistent with Agnico Eagle's expectations; that the effect of tariffs or trade disputes will not materially affect the price or availability of the inputs the Company uses at its operations; that Agnico Eagle's current estimates of mineral reserves, mineral resources, mineral grades and metal recovery are accurate; that there are no material delays in the timing for completion of ongoing growth projects; that seismic activity at the Company's operations at LaRonde, Goldex, Fosterville and other properties is as expected by the Company and that the Company's efforts to mitigate its effect on mining operations, including with respect to community relations, are successful; that the Company's current plans to address climate change and reduce greenhouse gas emissions are successful; that the Company's current plans to optimize production are successful; that there are no material variations in the current tax and regulatory environment; that governments, the Company or others do not take measures in response to pandemics or other health emergencies or otherwise that, individually or in the aggregate, materially affect the Company's ability to operate its business or its productivity; and that measures taken relating to, or other effects of, pandemics or other health emergencies do not affect the Company's ability to obtain necessary supplies and deliver them to its mine sites. Many factors, known and unknown, could cause the actual results to be materially different from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such risks include, but are not limited to: the volatility of prices of gold and other metals; uncertainty of mineral reserves, mineral resources, mineral grades and mineral recovery estimates; uncertainty of future production, project development, capital expenditures and other costs; foreign exchange rate fluctuations; inflationary pressures; financing of additional capital requirements; cost of exploration and development programs; seismic activity at the Company's operations, including at LaRonde, Goldex and Fosterville; mining risks; community protests, including by Indigenous groups; risks associated with foreign operations; risks associated with joint ventures; governmental and environmental regulation; the volatility of the Company's stock price; risks associated with the Company's currency, fuel and by-product metal derivative strategies; the current interest rate environment; the potential for major economies to encounter a slowdown in economic activity or a recession; the potential for increased conflict or hostilities in various regions, including Europe, South America and the Middle East; and the extent and manner of communicable diseases or outbreaks, and measures taken by governments, the Company or others to attempt to mitigate the spread thereof may directly or indirectly affect the Company. For a more detailed discussion of such risks and other factors that may affect the Company's ability to achieve the expectations set forth in the forward-looking statements contained in this news release, see the AIF and 2025 MD&A filed on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and included in the Form 40-F filed on EDGAR at www.sec.gov , as well as the Company's other filings with the Canadian securities regulators and the SEC. Other than as required by law, the Company does not intend, and does not assume any obligation, to update these forward-looking statements.
Notes to Investors Regarding Certain Project Evaluations
The forecast parameters surrounding certain projects, including Detour Lake underground, Upper Beaver, Hope Bay and the "fill-the-mill" strategy at Canadian Malartic (Odyssey Shaft #1, Odyssey Shaft #2, Marban, Wasamac), were based on internal evaluations, which are preliminary in nature and include inferred mineral resources that are too speculative geologically to have economic considerations applied to them that would enable them to be categorized as mineral reserves and there is no certainty that the forecast production amounts will be realized.
The basis for the internal evaluations and the qualifications and assumptions made by the qualified persons who undertook the internal evaluations are set out in this news release and the news releases dated June 29, 2024 for Detour Lake underground and dated July 31, 2024 for Upper Beaver. The results of the internal evaluations had no impact on the results of any pre-feasibility or feasibility study. An updated internal evaluation is expected in the second quarter of 2026 for Hope Bay, in the first quarter of 2027 for the "fill-the-mill" strategy at Canadian Malartic and in mid-2027 for Detour Lake and Upper Beaver.
Scientific and Technical Information
The scientific and technical information contained in this news release relating to Nunavut, Quebec and Finland operations has been approved by Dominique Girard, Eng., Executive Vice-President & Chief Operating Officer – Nunavut, Quebec & Europe; relating to Ontario, Australia and Mexico operations has been approved by Natasha Vaz, P.Eng., Executive Vice-President & Chief Operating Officer – Ontario, Australia & Mexico; and relating to exploration has been approved by Guy Gosselin, Eng. and P.Geo., Executive Vice-President, Exploration, each of whom is a "Qualified Person" for the purposes of the Canadian Securities Administrators' National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects ("NI 43-101").
Additional Information
Additional information about each of the Company's material mineral projects as at December 31, 2025, including information regarding data verification, key assumptions, parameters and methods used to estimate mineral reserves and mineral resources and the risks that could materially affect the development of the mineral reserves and mineral resources required by sections 3.2 and 3.3 and paragraphs 3.4(a), (c) and (d) of NI 43-101 can be found in the Company's AIF and 2025 MD&A filed on SEDAR+ and with the SEC on EDGAR and in the following technical reports filed on SEDAR+ in respect of the Company's material mineral properties: Detour Lake Operation, Ontario, Canada, NI 43-101 Technical Report (September 20, 2024); NI 43-101 Technical Report of the LaRonde complex in Quebec, Canada (March 24, 2023); NI 43-101 Technical Report Canadian Malartic Mine, Quebec, Canada (March 25, 2021); Technical Report on the Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves at Meadowbank Gold complex including the Amaruq Satellite Mine Development, Nunavut, Canada as at December 31, 2017 (February 14, 2018); and the Updated Technical Report on the Meliadine Gold Project, Nunavut, Canada (February 11, 2015).
APPENDIX A – EXPLORATION DETAILS
East Gouldie and Odyssey deposits at Odyssey mine
Drill hole | Deposit / zone | From
| To (metres) | Depth of midpoint below surface
| Estimated true width (metres) | Gold grade (g/t) (uncapped) | Gold grade
(capped)* |
MEX25-346WZB | East Gouldie | 2,034.5 | 2,056.2 | 1,909 | 21.0 | 2.0 | 2.0 |
MEX25-348ZA | East Gouldie | 1,875.1 | 1,905.6 | 1,711 | 22.6 | 1.7 | 1.7 |
UGEG-016-010 | East Gouldie | 777.5 | 795.0 | 869 | 14.3 | 2.6 | 2.6 |
UGEG-071-031 | East Gouldie | 641.0 | 665.5 | 1,057 | 24.2 | 2.8 | 2.8 |
UGEG-095-010 | East Gouldie | 160.0 | 177.2 | 999 | 14.7 | 3.0 | 3.0 |
UGEG-095-014 | East Gouldie | 159.0 | 170.4 | 1,061 | 10.3 | 5.5 | 5.5 |
and | East Gouldie | 283.0 | 293.6 | 1,153 | 9.8 | 5.8 | 5.8 |
and | East Gouldie | 315.4 | 322.2 | 1,175 | 6.3 | 5.1 | 5.1 |
and | East Gouldie | 327.9 | 345.4 | 1,187 | 15.8 | 3.0 | 3.0 |
UGEG-103-005 | East Gouldie | 131.0 | 168.4 | 1,089 | 36.0 | 6.9 | 6.7 |
including | 141.1 | 157.0 | 1,089 | 15.3 | 13.1 | 12.6 | |
MEX25-350Z | East Gouldie | 1,512.0 | 1,522.5 | 1,065 | 10.0 | 2.2 | 2.2 |
UGOD-051-017 | Odyssey internal | 495.0 | 535.0 | 884 | 40.0** | 1.9 | 1.9 |
UGOD-057-005 | Odyssey internal | 555.2 | 561.2 | 978 | 6.0** | 9.8 | 9.8 |
UGOD-057-012 | Odyssey internal | 538.5 | 551.4 | 1,017 | 12.9** | 7.1 | 6.1 |
including | 546.5 | 551.4 | 1,020 | 4.9** | 14.7 | 12.0 | |
and | Odyssey internal | 582.0 | 635.5 | 1,067 | 53.5** | 9.7 | 9.0 |
UGOD-057-013 | Odyssey internal | 669.5 | 681.0 | 1,118 | 11.5** | 4.6 | 4.1 |
including | 677.7 | 680.0 | 1,121 | 2.4** | 17.2 | 14.8 | |
and | Odyssey North | 700.5 | 726.6 | 1,149 | 19.7 | 3.1 | 3.1 |
including | 716.5 | 721.0 | 1,153 | 3.4 | 6.3 | 6.3 | |
UGOD-064-018 | Odyssey internal | 355.5 | 369.0 | 891 | 13.5** | 4.3 | 4.3 |
UGOD-064-019 | Odyssey internal | 397.8 | 425.4 | 992 | 27.6** | 2.8 | 2.8 |
including | 408.0 | 416.0 | 992 | 8.0** | 5.6 | 5.6 | |
and | Odyssey North | 507.5 | 518.0 | 1,077 | 10.5** | 2.1 | 2.1 |
and | Odyssey North | 524.0 | 534.5 | 1,091 | 10.5** | 2.1 | 2.1 |
*Results from East Gouldie and Odyssey deposits use a capping factor of 20 g/t gold. |
**Core length. True width undetermined. |
West Pit and West Extension zones at Detour Lake
Drill hole | Zone | From
| To (metres) | Depth of
| Estimated true width
| Gold grade
|
DLM25-1240 | West Extension | 1,089.0 | 1,092.5 | 922 | 3.1 | 10.0 |
DLM25-1243 | West Extension | 837.0 | 842.1 | 734 | 4.4 | 28.0 |
and | West Extension | 910.9 | 913.9 | 794 | 2.6 | 11.7 |
DLM25-1245 | West Extension | 592.5 | 604.0 | 497 | 10.1 | 10.7 |
including | 601.0 | 604.0 | 501 | 2.6 | 37.8 | |
DLM25-1246 | West Extension | 889.8 | 897.1 | 801 | 6.0 | 4.3 |
DLM25-1255 | West Extension | 774.0 | 805.3 | 669 | 27.4 | 2.6 |
DLM25-1274 | West Extension | 911.0 | 914.0 | 797 | 2.6 | 14.0 |
and | West Extension | 930.0 | 941.0 | 816 | 9.5 | 3.6 |
DLM25-1282AW | West Extension | 580.8 | 586.0 | 526 | 4.9 | 6.5 |
DLM25-1282AW1 | West Extension | 1,176.2 | 1,186.0 | 1,000 | 9.2 | 5.9 |
DLM26-1299 | West Pit | 99.0 | 102.0 | 84 | 2.5 | 14.0 |
and | West Pit | 215.4 | 231.7 | 187 | 14.1 | 8.9 |
including | 215.4 | 220.0 | 182 | 4.0 | 18.3 | |
and including | 226.8 | 231.7 | 191 | 4.2 | 11.1 | |
DLM26-1313 | West Pit | 237.0 | 264.0 | 210 | 23.2 | 2.9 |
including | 257.0 | 264.0 | 218 | 6.0 | 8.1 | |
and | West Pit | 278.5 | 288.9 | 238 | 9.0 | 14.9 |
*Results from Detour Lake are uncapped. |
Upper Beaver deposit
Drill hole | Zone | From
| To
| Depth of
| Estimated
| Gold grade (g/t)
| Gold
(g/t)
| Copper
(%)
| Copper
(%)
|
KLUB25-881W3 | Zone 201 | 587.6 | 594.4 | 555 | 6.4 | 7.9 | 7.9 | 0.98 | 0.98 |
including | Zone 201 | 591.0 | 592.8 | 555 | 1.8 | 15.0 | 15.0 | 0.85 | 0.85 |
KLUB25-881W5 | Zone 201 | 615.9 | 619.2 | 584 | 2.9 | 18.3 | 18.3 | 1.19 | 1.19 |
including | Zone 201 | 618.4 | 619.2 | 585 | 0.7 | 58.0 | 58.0 | 1.48 | 1.48 |
KLUB26-913A | Zone 201 | 597.5 | 602.0 | 531 | 4.2 | 4.5 | 4.5 | 1.07 | 1.07 |
including | Zone 201 | 597.5 | 599.0 | 530 | 1.4 | 10.6 | 10.6 | 1.29 | 1.29 |
KLUB26-913W5 | Zone 201 | 629.1 | 632.6 | 574 | 3.2 | 9.7 | 9.7 | 1.52 | 1.52 |
KLUB26-913W6 | Zone 201 | 647.7 | 653.8 | 599 | 6.0 | 8.3 | 8.3 | 0.40 | 0.40 |
including | Zone 201 | 651.0 | 652.0 | 599 | 1.0 | 44.3 | 44.3 | 1.64 | 1.64 |
and | Zone 201 | 656.5 | 663.5 | 607 | 6.9 | 6.0 | 6.0 | 0.53 | 0.53 |
KLUB26-916W2 | Zone 201 | 553.0 | 555.4 | 501 | 1.8 | 2.4 | 2.4 | 3.17 | 2.77 |
KLUB26-915A | Zone 107 | 595.5 | 596.5 | 535 | 0.9 | 45.5 | 45.5 | 0.21 | 0.21 |
*At Upper Beaver, results use capping factors of 85 g/t gold and 6.5% copper for Zone 201 and 135 g/t gold and 4.0% copper for Zone 107. |
Exploration Drill Collar Coordinates
Drill hole | UTM East* | UTM North* | Elevation
sea level) | Azimuth
| Dip (degrees) | Length
|
Odyssey mine | ||||||
MEX25-346WZB | 717451 | 5334739 | 309 | 143 | -78 | 2,221 |
MEX25-348ZA | 717440 | 5334731 | 310 | 182 | -75 | 3,000 |
UGEG-016-010 | 718856 | 5333901 | 113 | 163 | -66 | 845 |
UGEG-071-031 | 717758 | 5333977 | -345 | 143 | -42 | 711 |
UGEG-095-010 | 717593 | 5333755 | -619 | 143 | -27 | 375 |
UGEG-095-014 | 717591 | 5333756 | -619 | 150 | -56 | 360 |
UGEG-103-005 | 717561 | 5333797 | -699 | 214 | -34 | 370 |
MEX25-350Z | 716852 | 5334693 | 316 | 199 | -68 | 1,614 |
UGOD-051-017 | 718102 | 5334207 | -203 | 20 | -48 | 585 |
UGOD-057-005 | 718006 | 5334110 | -261 | 14 | -51 | 700 |
UGOD-057-012 | 718006 | 5334110 | -261 | 14 | -57 | 756 |
UGOD-057-013 | 718006 | 5334110 | -261 | 18 | -55 | 767 |
UGOD-064-018 | 717907 | 5334312 | -333 | 344 | -44 | 435 |
UGOD-064-019 | 717907 | 5334311 | -333 | 2 | -59 | 569 |
Detour Lake | ||||||
DLM25-1240 | 584832 | 5542449 | 296 | 188 | -59 | 1,176 |
DLM25-1243 | 586037 | 5542184 | 295 | 187 | -66 | 975 |
DLM25-1245 | 586199 | 5542065 | 292 | 181 | -58 | 762 |
DLM25-1246 | 585156 | 5542251 | 287 | 188 | -65 | 1,113 |
DLM25-1252 | 586120 | 5541916 | 290 | 179 | -67 | 720 |
DLM25-1255 | 585837 | 5542204 | 291 | 192 | -60 | 951 |
DLM25-1274 | 585796 | 5542210 | 291 | 186 | -65 | 951 |
DLM25-1282AW | 586597 | 5542188 | 298 | 179 | -68 | 669 |
DLM25-1282AW1 | 586597 | 5542188 | 298 | 179 | -68 | 1,253 |
DLM26-1299 | 587148 | 5541601 | 290 | 177 | -59 | 351 |
DLM26-1313 | 587187 | 5541623 | 291 | 178 | -59 | 402 |
Upper Beaver | ||||||
KLUB25-881W3 | 591667 | 5335847 | 304 | 151 | -74 | 642 |
KLUB25-881W5 | 591667 | 5335847 | 304 | 151 | -74 | 656 |
KLUB26-913A | 591687 | 5335928 | 305 | 155 | -71 | 647 |
KLUB26-913W5 | 591687 | 5335928 | 305 | 155 | -71 | 689 |
KLUB26-913W6 | 591687 | 5335928 | 305 | 155 | -71 | 700 |
KLUB26-916W2 | 591667 | 5335847 | 304 | 148 | -70 | 593 |
KLUB26-915A | 591844 | 5336055 | 303 | 149 | -69 | 641 |
*Coordinate Systems: NAD 83 UTM Zone 17N for Odyssey; NAD 1983 UTM Zone 17N for Detour Lake and Upper Beaver. |
APPENDIX B – FINANCIAL INFORMATION
AGNICO EAGLE MINES LIMITED | |||
SUMMARY OF OPERATIONS KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS | |||
(thousands of UnitedStates dollars, except where noted) | |||
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
2026 | 2025 | ||
Net income - key line items: | |||
Revenue from mine operations: | |||
LaRonde | 401,927 | 279,083 | |
Canadian Malartic | 754,853 | 422,047 | |
Goldex | 166,536 | 95,969 | |
Quebec | 1,323,316 | 797,099 | |
Detour Lake | 944,230 | 443,886 | |
Macassa | 306,444 | 235,662 | |
Ontario | 1,250,674 | 679,548 | |
Meliadine | 376,594 | 258,289 | |
Meadowbank | 594,426 | 405,085 | |
Nunavut | 971,020 | 663,374 | |
Fosterville | 180,676 | 109,829 | |
Australia | 180,676 | 109,829 | |
Kittila | 251,898 | 161,088 | |
Finland | 251,898 | 161,088 | |
Pinos Altos | 122,272 | 57,310 | |
Mexico | 122,272 | 57,310 | |
Corporate and Other | (267) | — | |
Revenues from mining operations | $ 4,099,589 | $ 2,468,248 | |
Production costs | 955,587 | 767,733 | |
Amortization of property, plant and mine development | 420,266 | 416,800 | |
Gross profit | 2,723,736 | 1,283,715 | |
Exploration, corporate and other | 164,112 | 89,144 | |
Income before income and mining taxes | 2,559,624 | 1,194,571 | |
Income and mining taxes expense | 864,163 | 379,840 | |
Net income for the period | $ 1,695,461 | $ 814,731 | |
Net income per share — basic | $ 3.39 | $ 1.62 | |
Net income per share — diluted | $ 3.38 | $ 1.62 | |
Cash flows: | |||
Cash provided by operating activities | $ 1,345,868 | $ 1,044,246 | |
Cash used in investing activities | $ (764,859) | $ (649,940) | |
Cash used in financing activities | $ (334,652) | $ (182,966) | |
Realized prices: | |||
Gold (per ounce) | $ 4,861 | $ 2,891 | |
Silver (per ounce) | $ 83.90 | $ 33.07 |
AGNICO EAGLE MINES LIMITED | |||
SUMMARY OF OPERATIONS KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS | |||
(thousands of UnitedStates dollars, except where noted) | |||
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
2026 | 2025 | ||
Payable production(i): | |||
Gold (ounces): | |||
LaRonde | 81,596 | 91,491 | |
Canadian Malartic | 166,216 | 159,773 | |
Goldex | 29,372 | 30,016 | |
Quebec | 277,184 | 281,280 | |
Detour Lake | 177,019 | 152,838 | |
Macassa | 55,593 | 86,028 | |
Ontario | 232,612 | 238,866 | |
Meliadine | 93,831 | 98,512 | |
Meadowbank | 113,862 | 140,126 | |
Nunavut | 207,693 | 238,638 | |
Fosterville | 41,443 | 43,615 | |
Australia | 41,443 | 43,615 | |
Kittila | 48,527 | 54,104 | |
Finland | 48,527 | 54,104 | |
Pinos Altos | 17,650 | 17,291 | |
Mexico | 17,650 | 17,291 | |
Total gold (ounces): | 825,109 | 873,794 | |
Silver (thousands of ounces) | 599 | 602 | |
Zinc (tonnes) | 1,019 | 1,742 | |
Copper (tonnes) | 1,479 | 1,384 | |
AGNICO EAGLE MINES LIMITED | |||
SUMMARY OF OPERATIONS KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS | |||
(thousands of UnitedStates dollars, except where noted) | |||
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
2026 | 2025 | ||
Payable metal sold(ii): | |||
Gold (ounces): | |||
LaRonde | 78,447 | 90,509 | |
Canadian Malartic | 155,297 | 144,663 | |
Goldex | 31,756 | 30,693 | |
Quebec | 265,500 | 265,865 | |
Detour Lake | 191,349 | 155,480 | |
Macassa | 62,034 | 81,000 | |
Ontario | 253,383 | 236,480 | |
Meliadine | 77,250 | 89,270 | |
Meadowbank | 121,761 | 140,350 | |
Nunavut | 199,011 | 229,620 | |
Fosterville | 38,000 | 38,000 | |
Australia | 38,000 | 38,000 | |
Kittila | 52,600 | 56,000 | |
Finland | 52,600 | 56,000 | |
Pinos Altos | 21,157 | 17,000 | |
Mexico | 21,157 | 17,000 | |
Total gold (ounces): | 829,651 | 842,965 | |
Silver (thousands of ounces) | 617 | 527 | |
Zinc (tonnes) | 1,184 | 1,812 | |
Copper (tonnes) | 1,509 | 1,398 | |
Notes: |
(i) Payable production (a non-GAAP non-financial performance measure) is the quantity of mineral produced during a period contained in products that are or will be sold by the Company, whether such products are sold during the period or held as inventories at the end of the period. For the three months ended March 31, 2026 and 2025, it excludes 418 payable gold ounces and 1,811 payable gold ounces produced at La India along with 76 payable gold ounces and 25 payable gold ounces produced at Creston Mascota, respectively. |
(ii) Payable metals sold at Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa exclude the in-kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines. For the three months ended March 31, 2025, it excludes 2,500 payable gold ounces sold at La India. |
AGNICO EAGLE MINES LIMITED | |||
CONDENSED INTERIM CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS | |||
(thousands of United States dollars, except share amounts) | |||
(Unaudited) | |||
As at | As at | ||
March 31, 2026 | December 31, 2025 | ||
ASSETS | |||
Current assets: | |||
Cash and cash equivalents | $ 3,111,869 | $ 2,866,053 | |
Inventories | 1,578,848 | 1,698,830 | |
Fair value of derivative financial instruments | 28,172 | 34,428 | |
Other current assets | 410,385 | 394,631 | |
Total current assets | 5,129,274 | 4,993,942 | |
Non-current assets: | |||
Goodwill | 4,157,672 | 4,157,672 | |
Property, plant and mine development | 23,027,704 | 22,850,540 | |
Investments | 1,814,118 | 1,508,252 | |
Other assets | 1,026,933 | 960,885 | |
Total assets | $ 35,155,701 | $ 34,471,291 | |
LIABILITIES | |||
Current liabilities: | |||
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities | $ 1,090,948 | $ 1,033,444 | |
Share based liabilities | 36,881 | 31,722 | |
Income taxes payable | 250,218 | 1,226,347 | |
Reclamation provision | 195,227 | 144,537 | |
Lease obligations | 32,573 | 30,480 | |
Fair value of derivative financial instruments | 23,475 | 5,676 | |
Total current liabilities | 1,629,322 | 2,472,206 | |
Non-current liabilities: | |||
Long-term debt | 196,548 | 196,271 | |
Reclamation provision | 1,291,147 | 1,318,476 | |
Lease obligations | 90,098 | 94,719 | |
Share based liabilities | 12,615 | 23,921 | |
Deferred income and mining tax liabilities | 5,450,784 | 5,373,013 | |
Other liabilities | 210,041 | 250,221 | |
Total liabilities | 8,880,555 | 9,728,827 | |
EQUITY | |||
Common shares: | |||
Outstanding — 500,653,224 common shares issued, less 616,987 shares held in trust | 18,759,399 | 18,699,862 | |
Stock options | 164,637 | 166,775 | |
Retained earnings | 6,814,704 | 5,463,906 | |
Other reserves | 536,406 | 411,921 | |
Total equity | 26,275,146 | 24,742,464 | |
Total liabilities and equity | $ 35,155,701 | $ 34,471,291 |
AGNICO EAGLE MINES LIMITED | |||
CONDENSED INTERIM CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME | |||
(thousands of UnitedStates dollars, except per share amounts) | |||
(Unaudited) | |||
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
2026 | 2025 | ||
REVENUES | |||
Revenues from mining operations | $ 4,099,589 | $ 2,468,248 | |
COST OF SALES | |||
Production costs | 955,587 | 767,733 | |
Amortization of property, plant and mine development | 420,266 | 416,800 | |
Gross profit | 2,723,736 | 1,283,715 | |
EXPENSES (INCOME) | |||
Exploration and corporate development | 52,556 | 41,805 | |
General and administrative | 77,850 | 60,709 | |
Finance costs | 15,756 | 22,444 | |
Gain on derivative financial instruments | (4,700) | (68,859) | |
Foreign currency translation gain | (733) | (60) | |
Care and maintenance | 22,596 | 13,901 | |
Other income and expenses | 787 | 19,204 | |
Income before income and mining taxes | 2,559,624 | 1,194,571 | |
Income and mining taxes expense | 864,163 | 379,840 | |
Net income for the period | $ 1,695,461 | $ 814,731 | |
Net income per share - basic | $ 3.39 | $ 1.62 | |
Net income per share - diluted | $ 3.38 | $ 1.62 | |
Adjusted net income per share - basic (i) | $ 3.41 | $ 1.53 | |
Adjusted net income per share - diluted (i) | $ 3.40 | $ 1.53 | |
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding (in thousands): | |||
Basic | 500,240 | 502,410 | |
Diluted | 501,729 | 503,773 | |
Notes: |
(i) Adjusted net income per share is not a recognized measure under IFRS Accounting Standards and this data may not be comparable to data reported by other companies. See Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance – Adjusted Net Income and Adjusted Net Income per Share for a discussion of the composition and usefulness of this measure and a reconciliation to the nearest IFRS Accounting Standards measure |
AGNICO EAGLE MINES LIMITED | |||
CONDENSED INTERIM CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS | |||
(thousands of UnitedStates dollars) | |||
(Unaudited) | |||
Three Months Ended March 31, | |||
2026 | 2025 | ||
OPERATING ACTIVITIES | |||
Net income for the period | $ 1,695,461 | $ 814,731 | |
Add (deduct) adjusting items: | |||
Amortization of property, plant and mine development | 420,266 | 416,800 | |
Deferred income and mining taxes | 59,537 | 18,491 | |
Unrealized loss (gain) on currency and commodity derivatives | 24,054 | (31,120) | |
Unrealized gain on warrants | (18,989) | (54,168) | |
Stock-based compensation | 34,931 | 27,393 | |
Foreign currency translation gain | (733) | (60) | |
Other | 16,835 | 17,323 | |
Changes in non-cash working capital balances: | |||
Income taxes | (989,080) | (176,739) | |
Inventories | 36,800 | 30,917 | |
Other current assets | (11,014) | 31,390 | |
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities | 77,800 | (50,712) | |
Cash provided by operating activities | 1,345,868 | 1,044,246 | |
INVESTING ACTIVITIES | |||
Additions to property, plant and mine development | (613,749) | (450,124) | |
Purchase of O3 Mining, net of cash and cash equivalents acquired | — | (121,960) | |
Contributions for acquisition of mineral assets | (5,280) | (3,825) | |
Purchase of equity securities and other investments | (144,702) | (68,057) | |
Other investing activities | (1,128) | (5,974) | |
Cash used in investing activities | (764,859) | (649,940) | |
FINANCING ACTIVITIES | |||
Repayment of lease obligations | (7,238) | (9,178) | |
Dividends paid | (203,165) | (175,567) | |
Repurchase of common shares | (167,833) | (60,050) | |
Proceeds on exercise of stock options | 31,434 | 52,026 | |
Common shares issued | 12,150 | 9,803 | |
Cash used in financing activities | (334,652) | (182,966) | |
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents | (541) | 541 | |
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents during the period | 245,816 | 211,881 | |
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period | 2,866,053 | 926,431 | |
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period | $ 3,111,869 | $ 1,138,312 | |
SUPPLEMENTAL CASH FLOW INFORMATION | |||
Interest paid | $ 563 | $ 1,185 | |
Income and mining taxes paid | $ 1,788,322 | $ 536,602 |

SOURCE Agnico Eagle Mines Limited

Analys
Rapporter
Analys
Rapporter
1 DAG %
Senast
OMX Stockholm 30
0,66%
(vid stängning)
Hacksaw
Igår, 14:30
Hacksaws VD sägs upp
OMX Stockholm 30
1 DAG %
Senast
3 060,48