Assessing Newmont (NEM) Valuation After Earnings Beats Higher Gold Prices And The Newcrest Deal

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Newmont (NEM) is back in focus after a run of five straight earnings beats supported by firmer gold prices, as investors weigh ongoing production and cost headwinds against its Newcrest acquisition and longer term asset focus.
See our latest analysis for Newmont.
At a share price of $111.85, Newmont has seen a 13.97% 1 month share price return and a 10.50% year to date share price return. Its 1 year total shareholder return of 113.18% suggests momentum has been strong, even as recent headlines around earnings beats, higher gold prices and the Newcrest integration keep refocusing attention on valuation and risk.
If Newmont’s run has you rethinking gold exposure, it can be useful to see how other producers stack up using our screener for 29 elite gold producer stocks
With earnings beats, an acquisition pipeline and a reported forward P/E of 13 all in the mix, the question is whether Newmont at about $112 is still mispriced value or if the market is already banking on future growth.
Compared with the last close at $111.85, the most followed narrative assigns Newmont a fair value of $51.36, which points to a wide valuation gap.
The management’s focus on Tier 1 assets could push the production costs even lower, enhancing profitability in the face of the ongoing commodity supercycle.
Asset concentration is a risk as unforeseen circumstances and environmental pressures could impact the production.
Want to see what sits behind that fair value call? The narrative leans heavily on future margins, capital intensity, and how concentrated Tier 1 production might reshape earnings power.
Result: Fair Value of $51.36 (OVERVALUED)
Have a read of the narrative in full and understand what’s behind the forecasts.
However, concentrated Tier 1 exposure and high capex commitments mean any setback in key mines, or a sharp gold price move, could quickly challenge this valuation case.
Find out about the key risks to this Newmont narrative.
The narrative fair value of $51.36 suggests Newmont is heavily overvalued, but the market is sending a different message. At a P/E of 16.9x, the shares trade well below the US Metals and Mining industry at 22.8x and peers at 30.4x, and also below a fair ratio of 29.8x. This points to a large valuation gap, which could indicate either mispricing or a higher level of risk being priced in. Which side of the story do you think is closer to reality?




