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DATE
- Thursday, July 24, 2025, at 5:30 p.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS
- Chief Executive Officer — Tom Palmer
- President and Chief Operating Officer — Natasha Viljoen
- Chief Legal Officer and Interim Chief Financial Officer — Peter Wexler
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RISKS
- CEO Palmer reported, "Two fall of ground incidents occurred at our Red Chris operation in British Columbia, blocking access to the underground work area of our non-producing project at the site," resulting in a suspension of operations at Red Chris as emergency protocols are executed and safe recovery efforts are ongoing.
- Management confirmed that gold production at Cadia and Penasquito is expected to decline in the second half of 2025, due to planned mine sequencing and lower ore grades.
- All-in sustaining costs (non-GAAP) are projected to be higher in Q3 and Q4, due to increased sustaining capital expenditures and higher taxes and royalties linked to elevated gold prices.
- Sustaining capital spending is expected to be weighted to the second half of 2025 (approximately 57%) at multiple sites, with management citing deliberate deferrals and the need to address historical underinvestment in tailings remediation and storage at Cadia.
TAKEAWAYS
- Red Chris Incident-- CEO Palmer stated, "operations at Red Chris have been suspended" following two fall of ground incidents, with access to the underground work area blocked and a live rescue underway for three individuals.
- Gold Production-- 1.5 million ounces were produced in Q2 2025, which management stated is "in line with our full-year guidance".
- Copper Production-- 36,000 tonnes of copper were produced in Q2 2025, consistent with previously issued guidance.
- Cash Flow from Operations-- $2.4 billion in cash flow from operations was generated in Q2 2025, driven by core managed operations and supported by higher metal prices and favorable working capital adjustments.
- Free Cash Flow [Quarterly Record]-- $1.7 billion in free cash flow was achieved in Q2 2025, with over $1.5 billion, or 90%, generated by core managed operations.
- Adjusted EBITDA-- $3 billion in adjusted EBITDA was reported in Q2 2025.
- Adjusted Net Income-- Adjusted net income was $1.43 per share in Q2 2025, including $0.63 from asset divestment gains (non-GAAP) and $0.14 from mark-to-market gains on equity investments, partially offset by $0.31 in related taxes.
- Cost Performance-- Gold all-in sustaining cost on a co-product basis was $1,015.93 per ounce in Q2 2025. Management expects costs to be higher in the second half as sustaining capital ramps up.
- Balance Sheet-- $6.2 billion in cash was held at quarter-end in Q2 2025, clearly above the company’s $3 billion average cash target as of Q2 2025, and an outstanding principal debt balance of $7.4 billion as of June 30, under the up-to-$8 billion target as of June 30.
- Non-Core Asset Divestment Program-- $3 billion in after-tax cash proceeds is expected this year, with $470 million in after-tax and commission cash proceeds from recent sales of Greatland Gold and Discovery Silver shares, as announced in Q2 2025.
- Shareholder Returns-- Over $1 billion has been returned to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases since the prior earnings call, with a new $3 billion share repurchase program authorized in Q2 2025, raising total buyback authorization to $6 billion as of Q2 2025, of which $2.8 billion in share repurchases has been executed since February 2025.
- Sustaining Capital Expenditure Outlook-- Spending is expected to be approximately 57% weighted to the second half of 2025 and includes deferrals for key projects, particularly at Tanami, Lihir, Cadia, Red Chris, and Brucejack, with capital spending for these projects expected to be weighted toward the second half of 2025.
- Development Capital Expenditure Outlook-- Now projected to be 51% weighted to the second half of 2025, chiefly due to project timing.
- Ahafo North Project-- On track to pour first gold in coming months and declare commercial production in Q4.
- Tanami Expansion 2-- The "risk of over break now behind us" per Viljoen, with critical path shaft work safely completed, and lining and equipping in progress.
- Production Mix Shift [Penasquito]-- Higher gold grades contributed to first-half results; management expects a transition to higher silver, lead, and zinc content in Q4 as the mine sequence moves into lower gold-grade areas.
- Lihir Mine Performance-- Consistent production with cost savings achieved by parking nine trucks and materially reducing the contractor footprint.
- Cost Structure Trends-- Palmer stated, "Labor is pretty much holding as we'd expect … [and] assumptions we made about inflationary impacts… are consistent with what we assumed."
- Unit Cost Presentation-- Management will provide all-in sustaining costs under both co-product and by-product methods going forward; Q2 2025 costs on a by-product basis were $1,375 per ounce, versus $1,015.93 per ounce on a co-product basis in Q2 2025.
- Asset Portfolio Simplification-- Palmer categorized equity positions in Greatland Gold and Orla as "non-core" indicating these may be candidates for divestment, while "very comfortable" retaining the Lundin Gold stake.
SUMMARY
An unplanned suspension at Red Chris following two significant fall of ground incidents led to immediate operational and safety impacts, with management prioritizing rescue and recovery. After completing its non-core asset divestment program, Newmont(NEM 2.78%) reported record quarterly free cash flow of $1.7 billion in Q2 2025, supported by stable gold and copper production, and confirmed it remains on track to meet its full-year guidance. The board doubled its share repurchase authorization to $6 billion in Q2 2025, with $2.8 billion in share repurchases already completed since February. Production at Cadia and Penasquito is forecast to decline in the second half of 2025 as mining transitions into lower-grade zones, while sustaining and development capital expenditures are heavily weighted toward the back half of 2025 by deliberate design. Management reconfirmed that all-in sustaining costs (non-GAAP, co-product basis) are likely to rise in Q3 and Q4 2025, and noted ongoing productivity and cost-optimization initiatives across Lihir, Boddington, and Cerro Negro.
- CEO Palmer said, "Our focus is internal, and the best use of our capital is to buy back Newmont stock," explicitly deprioritizing acquisitions in favor of organic portfolio development and buybacks.
- Management reported no change in financial or capital allocation strategy following the CFO transition, with an interim CFO leading the finance function and a search for a permanent successor underway.
- The Ahafo North project achieved commissioning milestones and is targeting commercial production in the fourth quarter, while the Tanami Expansion 2 project passed its most significant technical risk phase.
- Ongoing cost discipline -- particularly regarding labor, energy, and materials in the current inflationary setting -- has led to expenses tracking closely with previous forecasts, though higher taxes and royalties are expected due to strong gold prices.
- The company holds a $6.2 billion cash balance as of Q2 2025, outpacing internal liquidity targets, and continues to reduce gross debt toward its stated ceiling.
- Deferred proceeds from divested equity positions in Discovery Silver are scheduled for payment in equal tranches over four years, starting at the end of 2027.
- Capital allocation remains guided by three priorities: maintaining a strong balance sheet, funding organic projects, and returning capital to shareholders through dividends and repurchases.
- Management provided affirming full-year guidance application.
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
- Fall of Ground Incident: A mining event involving collapse or failure of rock from the roof or walls of an underground development, posing operational and safety risks.
- All-in Sustaining Cost: A comprehensive per-ounce metric capturing direct mining cost plus sustaining capital, corporate G&A, and other ongoing expenditures, facilitating peer benchmarking.
- Panel Cave: A method of underground mining where sections (panels) of ore are systematically caved and extracted, used for large, low-grade deposits.
- Ventilation Shaft: An engineered passage in a mine used for providing fresh air and enabling exhaust of used air, critical for underground operations.
- Block Cave: A large-scale underground mining technique that allows ore to break under its own weight after undercutting, enabling cost-efficient ore extraction for specific deposits.
- Reclamation: Remediation activity aimed at restoring mined land to an environmentally stable or useful condition, often required by regulation.
- Heap Leach: A process involving the stacking of ore and application of a leaching agent to extract metals, common for gold and silver extraction from low-grade material.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Tom Palmer: Thank you, operator. Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining our call. Today, I'm joined by Natasha Viljoen, President and Chief Operating Officer, Peter Wexler, our Chief Legal Officer, and our interim Chief Financial Officer, along with the rest of my executive leadership team, and we'll all be available to answer your questions at the end of the call. Please note our cautionary and refer to our SEC filings, which can be found on our website. As we reported yesterday, on Tuesday of this week, two fall of ground incidents occurred at our Red Chris operation in British Columbia, blocking the access way to the underground work area of our non-producing project at this site.
At the time of the initial incident, we had three business partner employees working underground, more than 500 meters beyond the affected zone. We asked them to relocate to a designated refuge chamber and confirmed that they had safely arrived in the chamber before the second fall of ground blocked the access way. This second fall of ground also impacted our underground communication system. All appropriate emergency response protocols were immediately activated, and operations at Red Chris have been suspended whilst we respond to the incident.
Along with the support from emergency responders and teams from nearby mine sites, our focus is on restoring communications to the refuge chamber, safely reestablishing access underground, and bringing our three teammates back to the surface and to their families and friends. We are diligently responding to this incident with excellent support from the broader industry and appreciate your understanding during this very live and evolving situation. Although overshadowed by this incident at Red Chris, Newmont delivered another strong operational performance in the second quarter, keeping us firmly on track to achieve our 2025 guidance. Underscoring this performance are our three key priorities for this year, which remain clear and unchanged. First and most importantly, to strengthen our safety culture.
Second, to stabilize our 11 managed operations, and third, to execute on capital returns. As I just described, we are concentrating the full force of our organization on the safe recovery of our team members at Red Chris, and we will conduct a thorough and independent investigation into the factors that led to this event. All findings and lessons learned will be leveraged across Newmont to strengthen our Always Safe program and will be shared across the broader mining industry. You can also expect that we will continue to provide regular updates as those efforts progress. Turning to our ongoing work to stabilize our operations, our portfolio of world-class gold and copper assets delivered another solid quarter.
We produced 1.5 million ounces of gold and 36,000 tonnes of copper, remaining in line with our full-year guidance and the indications we provided on our last call. This strong production supported robust financial results, including $2.4 billion of cash flow from operations after working capital, and an all-time record for quarterly free cash flow of $1.7 billion, of which more than $1.5 billion or 90% was generated by our core managed operations. Our shareholders continue to benefit from our non-core asset divestment program, which we successfully completed earlier this year.
As we announced last week, we expect to receive approximately $470 million in cash proceeds after taxes and commissions from the sale of our shares in Greatland Gold and Discovery Silver, shares that we received as consideration for the divestments of Telfer and Porcupine, respectively. As a consequence, we now expect to generate $3 billion in after-tax cash proceeds this year from our divestment program, and these proceeds will be used to support our third key priority, returning capital to shareholders. Since our last earnings call, we have retired $372 million of debt and returned over $1 billion to shareholders through both regular dividends and share repurchases.
In addition to making meaningful progress on our existing program, our board has approved an additional $3 billion share repurchase program, doubling our total authorization to $6 billion, of which $2.8 billion has been executed to date. With our strong second-quarter results and continued operational and financial momentum, we remain firmly on track to meet our 2025 guidance, whilst also generating industry-leading free cash flow and consistently returning capital to shareholders through a predictable dividend and ongoing share repurchases. With that, I'll now turn it to Natasha for an update on our operations.
Natasha Viljoen: Thank you, Tom. And hello, everyone. Before we jump into the details, I'd like to echo Tom's statements about our team members at Red Chris. Above all else, we are focused on bringing them home safely, and we are leveraging the strength and extensive experience of our global technical, operational, and safety teams with the support of our industry partners. Shifting now to our operational performance, this quarter underscores the resilience of our world-class portfolio, which has been thoughtfully assembled around high-quality, long-life assets. With this robust foundation in place, we are exceptionally well-positioned to organically deliver multi-decade value through our high-caliber operations, robust pipeline of projects, and deep bench of technical and operational leaders.
Our second-quarter operational results outperformed our previous expectations, effectively bookending the first half of the year and establishing a solid foundation for consistent delivery in the second half. This compelling performance was largely driven by production from our core managed operations, including higher-than-expected production from Cadia in the first half of the year due to higher-grade ore from the current panel cave. In addition, we have been able to notice reduced downtime related to planned maintenance. As previously mentioned, we expect production to decrease in the second half of the year as we continue to transition to our new panel cave, PC23.
Penasquito exceeded our gold production expectations in the first half of the year due to higher-grade ore from the pit. However, production is expected to shift from a higher proportion of gold to a higher proportion of silver, lead, and zinc content, primarily in the fourth quarter as we move to lower gold-grade areas in the Penasco Pit as part of a planned sequence in this large polymetallic mine. At Lihir, we delivered consistent production in the first half of the year. However, this will begin to decline in the second half of the year as we begin processing lower-grade material as part of our planned mine sequence.
What really stands out at Lihir is the steady progress we're making in bringing stability to both the mine and plant. For example, we are beginning to see the benefits from improved drainage and water management around our haul roads, along with cleaner access to both pit and stockpiles, creating a safer and more efficient design for this mine. As a result, we've been able to park nine trucks and materially reduce the contractor footprint, generating significant cost savings from these initiatives alone. For the last two years, we have been on a journey of integration, rationalization, and optimization with a view to creating value over a period of decades.
With the rationalization phase largely complete, we have been applying the full force of our operating and technical capability to systematically optimize operations across all 11 of our managed operations. As reflected in our results, these stabilization efforts are delivering tangible benefits, positioning us to confidently continue our optimization work. With a deep understanding of each and every asset, we are working on productivity enhancements and improvements to the cost structure across our managed operations, ensuring each site meets the performance metrics required to earn its place in our world-class portfolio.
You saw an example of this at the beginning of the year when we paused our investment in the underground expansion activities at Cerro Negro, and again more recently with the cost improvement measures we are working on at Merion. Building on the strong production performance from our core managed operations in the first half of the year, we remain firmly on track to meet the full-year guidance ranges we issued in February. Turning now to our cost performance, we remain on track and are continuing to focus on driving improvements across our portfolio. As mentioned, sharpening our efforts on cost discipline and productivity enhancements has been a primary focus for all of us at Newmont.
As a result, our cost applicable to sales and our all-in sustaining costs are in line with the guidance expectations set at the beginning of the year. Finally, our capital spend for 2025 is on track to land within the guidance ranges we set at the beginning of the year.
Starting with sustaining capital, we anticipate spending to be approximately 57% weighted towards the second half of the year, driven by deliberate decisions to defer expenditures for key activities across several sites, including plant spending at Tanami associated with our expansion of our ventilation system in the second half of the year, purposefully moving some of our ongoing optimization work at Lihir to the third and fourth quarters with a specific focus on asset integrity and reliability, and continued surface work at Red Chris and Brucejack during the warmest summer months in Canada.
Higher sustaining capital in the second half of the year will also see an expected increase at Cadia to support the ongoing panel cave development, as well as addressing the historical underinvestment in tailings remediation and storage capacity. While we continue to evaluate more efficient tailing solutions for this world-class operation, our development capital follows a similar guidance and is now expected to be 51% second-half weighted, primarily due to the timing of spend related to the projects currently in execution. At our Half Owned North project, we are progressing as planned and are preparing to pour first gold in the coming months, keeping us firmly on track to declare commercial production in the fourth quarter, as previously indicated.
In parallel, we successfully completed the 160-meter rise bore at the bottom of the shaft at our second expansion at Tanami and have removed the pentas, or an in-shaft barrier, which allowed the safe and efficient completion of this critical path work. Finally, at Cadia, savings from PC23 have continued according to plan, while steadily advancing the underground development for PC12 and progressing the important tailings remediation and storage capacity works I mentioned previously. I now will turn it back to Tom to go through our financial results for the quarter.
Tom Palmer: Thanks, Natasha. I'd like to start this update by acknowledging the recent departure of Karyn Ovelmen, our Chief Financial Officer. Whilst the timing was unfortunate, we respect her decision and thank her for her contributions to Newmont over the last two years. We have commenced a comprehensive search for our next CFO, and while we do that work, we continue to have a very strong and experienced finance team in place, being capably led by Peter Wexler on an interim basis. Importantly, there are no changes to our financial or capital allocation strategy, and we remain on track to deliver on our 2025 commitments and continue returning capital to shareholders.
As I mentioned at the start of the call, Newmont reported strong financial results in the second quarter, driven by robust production, steady unit costs, and a supportive gold price environment. Gold all-in sustaining costs for the quarter were slightly below our guidance for the full year at $1,015.93 an ounce on a co-product basis. This is largely due to lower sustaining capital spend in the first half of the year, which, as Natasha just described, is expected to increase in the second half by comparison. As a result, all-in sustaining costs are expected to be higher in the third and fourth quarters but overall in line with the indications we provided in February for the full year.
I also want to highlight that going forward, we plan to more prominently present our unit costs under both the co-product and by-product methodologies to better assist our investor base with industry benchmarking and comparisons to our peers. By providing our unit costs under both methods, we aim to offer our investors better insights into the individual contributions of the metals that we produce in addition to gold, whilst also providing a more comprehensive view of Newmont's overall margin performance. To put this into perspective, on a by-product basis, our gold all-in sustaining costs for the second quarter were $1,375 an ounce, which is more than $200 an ounce lower than our unit costs under the co-product method.
From our core managed portfolio in the second quarter, our gold all-in sustaining costs were $1,276 an ounce on a by-product basis. For the second quarter, Newmont generated $3 billion in adjusted EBITDA and reported an adjusted net income of $1.43 per share. Most material adjustments to net income for the quarter include $0.63 related to a gain from the sale of the Chim and Porcupine as part of our non-core asset divestment program, $0.14 related to mark-to-market gains on equity investments, primarily from the gain on the sale of shares received as proceeds from the sale of our Telfer operation and interest in the Havieron project to Greatland Gold, and $0.31 in offsetting taxes primarily related to these adjustments.
Most notably, Newmont generated $2.4 billion of cash flow from operations and $1.7 billion of free cash flow, well above the first quarter and setting a new record for quarterly cash flow performance. Our operating cash flow in the second quarter benefited from $156 million of favorable working capital adjustments, primarily driven by sales timing and higher revenue and pretax income associated with strong metal prices. We are encouraged by the strength of our cash flow performance in the first half, which underscores the quality and potential of the world-class portfolio we have assembled and continue to shape and optimize.
With this in mind, we remain committed to our shareholder-focused capital allocation strategy, which remains unchanged and has three priorities: to maintain a strong balance sheet, to steadily fund cash-generative organic projects, and to continue to return capital to shareholders. Starting with our balance sheet, we finished the quarter and the first half of the year with $6.2 billion in cash, well above our target of $3 billion on average. It's worth noting that this cash balance includes $330 million of the approximately $470 million in cash proceeds net of taxes and commissions from the sale of equity shares in Greatland Gold and Discovery Silver.
In addition, we continue to surpass our debt target of up to $8 billion and reached an outstanding principal balance of $7.4 billion as of June 30. We are proactively assessing to further reduce our outstanding debt, creating a flexible and resilient balance sheet that is able to navigate commodity cycles. Turning to shareholder returns, we declared a fixed common second-quarter dividend of $0.25 per share, consistent with the past seven quarters. Since our last earnings call in late April, we repurchased $750 million of shares, bringing the total shares repurchased in 2025 to $1.5 billion in total. Since February, we have executed $2.8 billion in share repurchases.
As I mentioned earlier, our board has approved an additional $3 billion share repurchase program. This brings our total authorization to $6 billion, demonstrating the confidence that we have in our business and our commitment to rewarding our shareholders with predictable dividends and ongoing share repurchases in 2025 and beyond. In closing, we delivered a strong second quarter and first half of the year and remain on track to achieve our 2025 guidance and deliver on our commitments for the benefit of our shareholders.
We achieved an all-time record quarterly free cash flow of $1.7 billion in the second quarter, and we continue to advance our disciplined capital allocation strategy, which includes strengthening our balance sheet through ongoing debt reductions and returning capital to shareholders through a predictable dividend and continued share repurchases, for which we have approved an additional $3 billion. Looking ahead, we will lean into the full capability of our teams and portfolio to leverage the momentum from our core managed operations in the first half of the year and continue building a stable and resilient future for Newmont. In turn, we are well-positioned to reward our shareholders through growing free cash flow per share and consistent capital returns.
However, we recognize that none of these matters until we bring our three Red Chris teammates home safe and sound. With that, I'll thank you for your time and turn it back over to the operator to open the line for questions.
Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. We ask that you please limit inquiries to one final question and one follow-up question. To ask a question, you may press star then 1 on your touch-tone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then 2. Our first question today comes from Lawson Winder from Bank of America. Lawson, please go ahead.
Lawson Winder: Hi. Thank you very much, operator. Hello, Tom and team. Very nice quarterly result, and thank you for today's update. Can I ask about your capital allocation priorities as it pertains to acquisitions? Certainly, your valuation has improved, your results have improved, and you're generating significant free cash flow. Is there an appetite for further acquisitions at Newmont? And then further to that, is copper still viewed as a strategic metal for Newmont as it pertains to acquisitions? Thank you.
Tom Palmer: Yes, Lawson, and good afternoon. I'll be as clear as I can. Our focus is internal, and the best use of our capital is to buy back Newmont stock. That's where you'll see us spend our time and attention. So internal focus, buying back Newmont stock. Your question around copper, we have producing assets in Red Chris, Boddington, and Cadia, and we have a magnificent organic project pipeline. Next hand off the rank is likely to be the Red Chris Block Cave, which is a copper-gold mine. So you will see us focus on a balance of copper in our portfolio as a gold mining company, but that copper exposure will come from our organic growth. Thank you very much.
Operator: Our next question today comes from Daniel Major from UBS. Daniel, please go ahead.
Daniel Major: Hi, Tom and team. Thanks for the question. Yes, the first one perhaps on management changes and management succession. Obviously, I guess Karyn's departure was somewhat unexpected. Certainly, there's been some discussion in the market around Natasha's appointment as president, whether that's a precursor to any other management changes. Wondering if you can make any comments on this and whether Karyn's departure impacts any other potential thinking about succession.
Tom Palmer: Thanks, Daniel. Good afternoon. Morning, I think. He's in London. He's in London. Yeah. It's good evening. Evening. Sorry. Sorry. A couple of comments. As I said in my prepared remarks, it's unfortunate Karyn resigned, but I've literally got sitting around me our finance leadership team, a really capable and experienced group of people. So we won't miss a beat, and in Peter Wexler, we have a very capable chief financial officer. So absolutely no concerns in terms of strength and capability of our business, and I think we've got a real opportunity to think about the next CFO that we bring in for the next exciting chapter of Newmont. So that's part of natural progression and evolution in organizations.
So very, very comfortable with where we sit with our existing team at the interim and very actually pretty excited about the opportunity we have in terms of that recruitment process. In terms of, and I didn't pick it up in our prepared remarks, but I'll take your question to have the opportunity to congratulate Natasha on the promotion to President and Chief Operating Officer, which we announced back in early May. Natasha has been with us almost two years now and has consistently demonstrated strong leadership and a deep commitment to safe and disciplined operational delivery. The expanded role is the opportunity to give Natasha a balance of both strategic and operational focus.
Also, an opportunity for her energy, her passion, and resolve to be critical attributes as we work to improve safety, cost, and productivity over time. A move to president is part of ongoing leadership development. It's something that Newmont has done for generations, something that Newmont has done incredibly well. I wouldn't read anything more into it other than a natural process of Newmont doing what Newmont has done very well for many years. I'm sitting in this role looking around at a number of people who have benefited from Newmont having a focus on leadership development, and I'm also a beneficiary of that.
So hopefully, Daniel, that gives you some color in terms of both the finance team and also Natasha's being the president.
Daniel Major: Great. Thanks so much. That's great color. And then the second question sort of cash flow outlook. You benefited from some working capital items during this period? I think payables, receivables, any color on kind of any reversal and how that might impact free cash flow into the second half? And then the second part of the question, could you just remind us on how much of deferred proceeds from the divestments you have remaining and when they will expect to be coming?
Tom Palmer: Yeah. Thanks, Daniel. What you'll see with the free cash flow generation in the second half of the year is going to be pretty steady production coming through. So for instance, the third quarter is going to look pretty similar to the second quarter. As the cash would cover, we'll see a step up in our sustaining capital in terms of that first half to second half weighting, pushing up to around 50% weighted in the second half. So, obviously, that'll come off our free cash flow. The other one to look at is our reclamation.
You should see first quarter to second quarter, that stepped up, and that's about us building the momentum around the construction of the two big water treatment plants down at Yanacocha. So you'll continue to see an increase in that spend. I think it's around $600 million or thereabouts we want to spend this year on that. So that will step up to a steady state rate. So you'll see people sustaining capital, steady production, and some of that reclamation spend will be factors in second half free cash flow.
Of course, the other area to keep in mind is we're enjoying our current gold price levels, and we'll start to see some tax payments from those higher gold prices, taxes, and royalties start to flow through. In terms of some of the equity positions, we're able to basically, we're out of Discovery Silver, so there's nothing left there. So those sales over the last couple of months, I mean, the titanium team can charge on and deliver from Porcupine. We still got some shares in Greatland Gold that are part of that transaction. I think and a deferred we've got deferred cash payments from both Discovery, and we've got some deferred contingent payments.
I think we announced at Discovery the deferred cash payments are around $150 million, and they're payable in equal tranches over a four-year period starting at the very end of 2027. In Greatland Gold, we've got some preferred contingent payments in the order of about $100 million. We've got about 9.9% left in Greatland Gold, and there's some covenants around that we can dispose of that. We're free. We've got a position in Orla still that came with the Musselwhite sale. Free and clear of Eleanor in terms of Dilma, free and clear of a chib with Zhijin. So think, Daniel, that probably gives you some of the key items in terms of that divestment program.
Daniel Major: Great. Thanks so much.
Tom Palmer: Thanks. Bye.
Operator: Thank you. The next question today comes from Fahad Tariq from Jefferies. Fahad, please go ahead.
Fahad Tariq: Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I want to focus a little bit on Cadia and Penasquito, which were clearly very strong in the second quarter on high grades. Can you maybe walk through production, why production is expected to decline specifically in the third quarter for these two mines? I know there's a bit of transition, but I just think you'd have to see a pretty significant grade drop off in the third quarter to see production come up. So I'm just trying to get more color on how to think about grades into the third quarter and just production of these two mines in the third quarter. Thanks.
Tom Palmer: Thanks, Fahad. Your line is a little cracky, so for those who might not have heard, just looking for some color in terms of the balance between first half and second half for Cadia and Penasquito. I'll ask Natasha maybe to talk about those operations and how we see that reduction.
Natasha Viljoen: Thanks, Tom, and thanks for that question. Obviously, both of these operations are key to our portfolio. If I can start with Penasquito. This year, we're seeing the benefits of work and the investment we've done in that open pit and pushbacks that we've done during last year. We've moved into phase seven of the Penasco pit, largely moved out of Chile, Colorado. Enough scope bit, very variable ore body specifically variable as far as the different metals are concerned. It's just the natural progression as we mine and follow our mine sequence. Through that, we do see different grades coming through.
So we will see lower grades of gold in the third quarter, and we will see higher grades of silver, lead, and zinc coming through. So typical indications about 2% higher silver and about one and a half percent higher zinc. We'll see an associated reduction in our gold grades. As far as Cadia is concerned, Cadia, of course, one of the newer operations in our portfolio. We have done quite a bit of work to understand this operation and all of the requirements to run it as a quality asset as we should.
As we see the first two block caves, PC1 and PC2, come to the end, we do see some model benefits from PC2, where the model has been predicting lower grades through PC2 as we come to the end of its life. But we do see the grades still hold strong as we complete the mining of PC2. Then, of course, we will slowly but surely, we're starting to ramp up PC23, and we will see that going through an original lower grades and then ramping up steadily into full production and higher grades. It's doing exactly as we expected it to.
Fahad Tariq: Great. Thank you.
Tom Palmer: Thanks, Fahad.
Operator: The next question today comes from Matthew Murphy from BMO Capital Markets. Matthew, please go ahead.
Matthew Murphy: Hi. Great quarter. We wish you great success in this rescue operation. I wanted to ask a question about Lihir. It seems to be doing really well. Natasha, you talked about some of the improvements being realized, and that's even before you've spent much CapEx on it. As the spend picks up in the back half, how does that set it up for 2026?
Natasha Viljoen: Matthew, really great question, and it is another one of our big operations that we feel quite excited about. You might remember that for a period of time, we've been talking about how we will stabilize that operation. It got us the opportunity to relook at the mine design, some of the basics like road design, specifically around water management on the various roads. What that has resulted in is far higher productivity in the mine because we can manage water better off our haul roads. Our fleet can run faster, and we've been able to park a number of trucks, as I said in our remarks, nine trucks in the process.
We've built on that by creating a buffer between the mine and the plant with intermediate stockpiles, which gives us both the opportunity to ensure a stable feed into the plant, disconnect the mine from the plant, and get more stable grades through the plant as well. The team has made material progress in how we think about the asset management of that asset, specifically starting with our big shutdowns, ensuring and being very considered around our big large shutdowns. You might remember at the end of last year, we had basically two of our biggest autoclaves and another autoclave down for maintenance.
With the skills that the team has been developing, focusing on big shutdowns, we have seen that shutdown come in ahead of time. We continue to build on that maturity in really creating stability in the plant, not only through more stable feed from the mine but just higher levels of reliability. I have to recognize, though, that we still have a bit to do. The plant still needs quite a bit of work in terms of asset management and reliability, and we are continuing to build the planning and execution capacity that we have on-site.
Tom Palmer: Maybe just a couple of builds, Matt, on Natasha's summary. We're very much about, as we've talked about over the course of a number of these calls, a big mine like Lihir setting it up for the long term. What Natasha's describing is the approach we're taking for an asset that's been a big asset in a portfolio. It now sits with a number of other peers in the Newmont portfolio. We're making deliberate decisions to set this mine up for the long term. It's what that ore body and that installed infrastructure and the people that are looking for from us.
We also have at Lihir one of our strongest general managers in Davitt Victoria, a man I've known for the better part of twenty-five years and a really, really strong general manager. A big complex mine like this is well suited to his set of capabilities.
Natasha Viljoen: And a very skilled people leader as well, which is something that operation thrives under.
Matthew Murphy: That's great. Thanks for the color.
Tom Palmer: Thanks, Matt.
Operator: Our next question today comes from Josh Wolfson from RBC Capital Markets. Josh, please go ahead.
Josh Wolfson: Thanks very much. Great job on the cost containment for total cash cost year to date. I'm wondering if you can provide any more details on some of the trends you're seeing in your underlying cost structure, including inflation rates, and if there's anything notable regionally as well. Thank you.
Tom Palmer: Yes. Thanks, Josh. Good afternoon. Largely, what we're seeing play out is consistent with expectations we set as we build our business plan and guided at the beginning of the year. Some swings and roundabouts with fuel energy materials and consumables, but not significant. So we're largely seeing the costs we expected to see this year. Labor is pretty much holding as we'd expect, both contracted services and our own employees. So what we expected is certainly playing out this year, and the assumptions we made about inflationary impacts in all of those different categories are consistent with what we assumed, even in the elevated gold price environment. Clearly, we're seeing the higher taxes and royalties associated with that.
Natasha's comment talked about stabilizing this portfolio and then looking to optimize the portfolio. We are very much focused on where we can get after productivity improvements and also enhancements to our cost structure. So we're absolutely not sitting on our laurels saying, oh, we're meeting expectations for what we assumed for this year. Recognize that this portfolio, which is still relatively new in terms of how we've shaped it, both the acquisitions, the integrations, the rationalization, and we are very much focused on productivity levels from every operation that meets our expectations and industry benchmarks. Ensuring that it's being supported by the appropriate cost structure.
So we continue to actively work that even though our costs are meeting the levels that we expected this year as we built our plan and guide.
Josh Wolfson: Got it. Thank you. As you sort of navigate stabilizing the operation, when we think about 2026, and what we should expect at that point, has there been any thought towards which of the larger project updates we could expect and whether the outlook will be beyond just a twelve-month basis? Thank you.
Tom Palmer: Just probably a couple of thoughts in terms of answering that question. Very much sitting at the halfway mark, focused on ensuring we safely deliver the second half of this year. Such a critical year given the change we've been through. So I want to make sure that our eyes are firmly on that task. In that, as we move into, we've started the process now building out our business plan for next year, and that's work that's very active at the moment.
Our expectations would be that in February, we'd do something similar to this year and be focusing on giving the market a set of numbers for the 2026 year, but we're at the moment, sleeves are rolled up, and we're head down, tail up, getting after what we can do to deliver a '26 business plan. So very much work in progress. On the project side of things, really important that we deliver, safely deliver first gold and commercial production out of Ahafo North. Continue to progress the Tanami expansion and continue to progress the two panel caves of Cadia.
But we are actively working our project pipeline, and I think as I've mentioned on previous calls, it's Red Chris is our project that's close to shovel-ready, and we're ensuring that we have feasibility study to a Newmont standard. That project washes its face, that we have the various consent and permits to be able to progress with that project. So very much focused on that project and whether that could come up to the mark be considered for full funds in the 2026 time frame.
Josh Wolfson: Thanks, Josh.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question today comes from Daniel Morgan from Baron Jebi. Daniel, please go ahead.
Daniel Morgan: Hi, Tom and team. How should we read production guidance? Basically, I think you beat your own plans by circa 100,000 ounces this quarter. Just trying to clarify, was that an unexpected bonus versus the plan? Was it a bring forward of stuff the second half to first half? Or how do you why not lift guidance somewhat? Is it pitched conservatively, or have you just brought forward ounces from half to Thank you.
Tom Palmer: Thanks, Daniel. Good morning. If you think about, I think, as Natasha answered the earlier question, you've certainly got a couple of big assets in Cadia and Penasquito. Cadia moving into some lower grades out of those panel caves is what our expectations are. We had the benefit of some positive reconciliations in the first half that's flowing through. So we will still remain sober in terms of what the model is telling us for Cadia out of those caves in the second half. Penasquito is running beautifully.
So we were able to get some good production through and through some of that material and benefited from the high metal production in the first half, but we do move into those higher grades in the second half. We look to the second half. We've got Nevada Gold Mines as a pretty important contributor in the second half, fourth quarter weighted. So, again, we've you know, it's a not insignificant part of our Newmont portfolio, and so we want to make sure we're cautious around ensuring that we can see that line of sight in the second half. We've got Yanacocha.
We'll get some expecting we'll have a stronger second half in terms of some of the injection leaching work we've got happening on the heap leaches there. We've got Ahafo North commissioning. Commissioning a new project has some risk associated with it. So, again, being prudent in terms of how we think about the second half. So it's a little bit of color, hopefully, Daniel. When I think about where we sit with our production, yep, we've had a good solid first half. We provided a number which had a range around it, and I think we're still sitting comfortably within that range. So we're firmly on track to meet our guidance.
Daniel Morgan: Thank you. Just a follow-up question, possibly one more for Natasha, which I guess is two-part, it's projects. So first, it's that are front of mind? Thank you. Can you please just expand on the Tanami shaft works? Is the risk of over break now behind us at concrete line, maybe go into a bit more detail? Then just on Ahafo, can you expand on the works remaining to first production and any risks?
Natasha Viljoen: Thank you, Daniel. Let me start with Tanami expansion two. The risk of the overbreak on this on the lower part of the shaft is truly behind us. We have completed the rise bore through the concrete super band that we've poured over at the beginning of well, in the first year into the beginning of this year. The pentas have been removed, so we now have clear access to the entire shaft. We've started with we're still putting a lining in at the bottom half or the bottom end of that shaft to make sure that there's alignment with the top half and that there's smooth access to the bottom. The equipping of the top half is progressing well.
As soon as we complete the lining in the bottom half, or the last bit of the shaft, we will complete that equipping as well. Underground operations are going to schedule. So I think everything there, the highest risk elements are behind us. Now it is the focus on completing the remaining work, under the leadership of also a very strong project director, general manager, Lee Cox. That team is going from strength to strength. Ahafo North is making good progress. We are getting ready for commissioning. We have indeed started commissioning in certain areas of the plant. As you would remember, we have started mining. We stopped mining material to get ready for the commissioning of the plant.
So we're very well on track. It's a little bit of a small ball piping left, a little bit of electrical work still left, but by and large, the large construction work is basically complete. We're very excited to go and see the first gold.
Daniel Morgan: Thank you so much for your help. Like this, Tom and Natasha? Thank you.
Operator: Our next question comes from Anita Soni from CIBC. Anita, please go ahead.
Anita Soni: Hi. Good evening, Tom. I just wanted to ask a little bit more about Red Chris. On Red Chris, could you just let me know I think you had mentioned that there was an initial fall of ground. Then the workers were asked to go to a refuge station. That fall of ground, did that happen in a decline?
Tom Palmer: Good afternoon, Anita. Yes. So the decline, that 200 meters down the decline? There was an initial fall of ground that was detected. So the emergency response protocols kicked in place. We only had those three people in that area, so it's not an operating mine. It's some development being done as part of preparing hopefully, for the Red Chris project in the coming period of time. So these three folks, when that event occurred, the call went out. Please make your way to the refuge chamber, which they did. They got themselves into the refuge chamber, radioed in that they were safely there.
Then shortly after that, in that same area in the decline, we had the larger fall of ground that blocked the access way and took out the leaky feeder cable, which has taken out our communication to the refuge chamber. So as I talked about then in my prepared remarks, our focus is on reestablishing communication back to the refuge chamber to confirm that all is safe and well. Whilst we work on various plans for getting access to rescue them. So we're working on plans to get access down through that decline again, to do so safely. We also have a secondary area to access, which would be through a vent shaft we're considering different methodologies to do that.
So a whole bunch of people both at Red Chris, wider Newmont, and it is amazing how the wider industry comes together to support solutions and equipment and plans. They're the two things that are being parallel. Getting communication reestablished and determining the safest and most effective rescue plan for the three people.
Anita Soni: Okay. Thanks. I hope they're safe and well, you get them out quickly. My second question is with respect to some of the changes that you that the capital spending. I just want to get an understanding why the capital spending was shifted I think you said it was deliberately, but in terms of I think Natasha said that there was some, order to maintain integrity of the mine at Lihir, could you just elaborate on those comments?
Natasha Viljoen: Anita, I think as I replied probably a little bit earlier on the work that we are doing at Lihir around our asset integrity work in the plant. There's also a big power plant that we are maintaining. As we plan and make sure that when we strike large shutdowns, that we do effective work and that we spend our capital effectively. Whilst we're talking about capital allocation, I think Andy, that is capital discipline and being sure that when we start to spend the capital that we're ready to spend it effectively. So we did make a deliberate decision on spending that a little bit lighter in the year.
Other areas would have been our bank rise nine at Tanami. That is work that has also developed through the productivity work that we have been doing, identifying a need for us to enhance some of our ventilation work. To enhance some of our productivity and development work at Tanami, and that's why that work will actively be happening in the second half. Lastly, just the summer period of works with Brucejack and Red Chris. It just happened that the spend moved a little bit more into the second half than what was planned originally.
Anita Soni: Alright. Thank you. The rest of my questions have been asked and answered. Thank you very much.
Tom Palmer: Thanks, Anita.
Operator: Our next question comes from Tanya Jakusconek from Scotiabank. Tanya, please go ahead.
Tanya Jakusconek: Great. Good evening, everyone, and thank you so much for taking my questions. I just hope that the miners get out safely as well. Just a couple of questions if I may. The first one is just coming back to your portfolio. Tom, this is for you. You mentioned Greatland Gold. You still have some positions there. I think you mentioned they're non-core. So those ones could be divested of. You mentioned Orla. You have an equity investment in that as well. Is that a non-core position as well?
Tom Palmer: Thanks, Tanya. I think the simplest answer to both of those is I think as we think about the Newmont portfolio and how we want to focus our time and effort and manage this portfolio and simplify this portfolio as much as we can. Both those positions you described, I'll put in the non-core category.
Tanya Jakusconek: Okay. I just wanted to check where your Lundin Gold position also stands in terms of that position because that's also a big position.
Tom Palmer: Very comfortable with our 32% interest in Lundin Gold and the Fruta del Norte asset. I think it's something we've only had it a minute with all of the other work we're doing. Ron Hochstein and crew are doing a terrific job running that asset, and there's a bunch of stuff we can learn from a great operator like Ron. So we want to understand and learn from that asset, but very comfortable with that position in our portfolio.
Tanya Jakusconek: Okay. Sorry. Lastly, I just want to ask does Wafi Golpu, have you had a chance to look at that? Does that fit at all?
Tom Palmer: Wafi Golpu is certainly we see that as an important asset, an important project in our organic project pipeline. It's something that we're actively working on in terms of the negotiations with the PNG government on converting a framework memorandum of understanding to a mineral development contract, which then enables you to get a special mining lease. Working very closely with the team at Harmony as we navigate through that. So very much looking at Wafi Golpu as an important project in our organic project pipeline, and these negotiations are important in getting some clear stability around any investment decisions that may come down the track with a project such as Wafi Golpu.
Tanya Jakusconek: Okay. Thank you for the clarification on those ones. Natasha, if I could ask one for you. I mean, you know, I looked at the portfolio and, you know, congrats on getting this stabilized. That's great to see. As you think about your core portfolio, where do you see and you talk about all of these productivity improvements. Where do you see the greatest bang for your buck in terms of productivity? Like, what assets? Do you think that, you know, we could see really improvements in productivity that would actually show really good cost?
Natasha Viljoen: Gosh. Tanya, it's going to be difficult to choose that one because I think the opportunities are different at every asset. But there are certainly opportunities for us across the board. I can perhaps just type to bookends as examples. The one bookend would be absolutely at Lihir. One of our big assets, plenty of opportunity that will help us to make big step changes, long-term asset, and continuously thinking about it. It's got several different aspects to how we improve that base. There's material people aspects that we're focusing on, asset management focus areas, mine layout and design for productivity, all the way into our tailings management. So, really, a diverse set of opportunities for us at Lihir.
Then, obviously, I think at Lihir, also a very unique opportunity for us to make an impact on the community of that Lihir Island. On the other bookend, probably I'll reflect on Cerro Negro, which has got a beautiful ore body, and our biggest challenge is productivity. We have assets that are in good shape. We don't have major challenges with reliability in our assets. We are working closely with our employees, with our unions on-site with an unwavering focus on how do we lift the productivity on that asset. So more of a singular focus on how do we do more with the assets and the teams that we do have.
Then we have a couple of assets that are in the full asset or in unique opportunities in unique areas are certainly benchmarked. Penasquito is one such an asset. We've recently worked through asset reviews where we did a multidisciplinary deep dive through all of our assets. In Penasquito, in every aspect, there's quite a bit for us to take learnings and take that across all of the operations. Then very recently, we've had the same experience with Cadia on their asset management strategies, asset management processes, specifically that we will leverage from and make sure that we use that across all of our other assets. So different for different assets and everyone unique opportunities.
Operator: Thank you. Our final question today comes from Hugo Nicolaci from Goldman Sachs. Hugo, please go ahead.
Hugo Nicolaci: Congrats on the quarter and the first half. Just a couple of operational questions for me, if I can. Firstly, just on Nevada, the production improvements in the second quarter. Looking promising that the costs there are still remaining high. How much of that's the ongoing production improvement works and then fleet replacement versus just underlying cost pressures? How confident do you remain in that full-year cost guidance?
Tom Palmer: Good morning, Hugo. I think when you think about Nevada, a couple of those questions are firmly for the operator. So I don't think it's appropriate that we give that level of granularity. We also haven't had our board meeting for this quarter yet. So Natasha, Francois, and I will all be in Nevada next week with the team there, and we'll have a board meeting and visit a couple of the operations and start to unpack in a bit more detail second-quarter performance with the team and also discuss, you know, the views and approach for the second half of the year and how opportunities are got after and are risk managed.
So if it's okay, Hugo, I think there's probably a question best asked of the operator when they report that on their results, you know, a couple of weeks time.
Hugo Nicolaci: Fair enough, Tom. Then maybe on one that is yours at Boddington, it looks like the mill ran above nameplate capacity in the quarter for the first time in about four years. Are you able to talk us through the productivity improvements there and how sustainable you think that is going forward and sort of holding that nameplate capacity?
Tom Palmer: Very observant, Hugo, but I'll pass to Natasha to give her perspective on Boddington, both mine and plant.
Natasha Viljoen: Yeah. No. I'll definitely do that. So, Hugo, let's start with the mine. You would remember just as we started to go through COVID, we rolled out an autonomous haul fleet at Boddington. It has been a continuous learning journey for us on reestablishing and redesigning an existing mining operation to be appropriate for an autonomous hauling fleet. The team has really done amazing work with our technical team under strong leadership, considering mine design, road width, the road layouts to be far more appropriate for an autonomous haul fleet. We have set certain need-type learnings from others on how to improve productivity. We have seen a 10% uplift in productivity through that with that autonomous haul fleet.
We see that at the moment as you might remember, we are still in a pushback campaign, and we see the benefits of us lifting just the total materials movement has left materially year on year on the back of the productivity improvements. We have not increased that fleet. So on the mining side, certainly, the team is doing really, really good work. On the blast side, it's all about asset management and reliability. It is closely related, though, to mining performance. It is closely related to fragmentation.
So back to mining discipline, ensuring that the fragmentation from the mining side is appropriate for feed, and then the work that the team has done on asset management and establishing the reliability levels that we need. So in both instances, it is working on making sure that the basis is strong so that we can continue to benefit from the work that we're doing.
Hugo Nicolaci: Natasha, so if I can just speak on that a little bit. Should we expect that plant to continue to run close to nameplate? If the mine is slower to get access to ore, then you'll draw down that, I think, 60 million tonne plus of stockpile and continue to run close to that 10 million tonnes a quarter.
Natasha Viljoen: We continue to draw on the medium-term stockpiles. We're still very much in the size of pushback, and we will still be there for the next at least twelve months. So our focus here is to get the pushbacks complete and making sure that we can adhere to the rates that we need to get that pushed back down in time.
Operator: This concludes the question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Tom Palmer for closing remarks.
Tom Palmer: Thank you, operator, and thank you, everyone, for taking time to join our call today, and I appreciate your full range of questions. Please enjoy the rest of your day or your evening. Thanks, everyone.
Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect your lines.