Outlook for Kinross Gold Stock in 2026

Written by Amy Legate-Wolfe at The Motley Fool Canada
Gold stocks have climbed as gold itself stays strong, and that matters more than any clever story a miner can tell. Central banks kept buying, investors kept treating gold like insurance, and geopolitical stress kept a floor under demand. Gold also tends to perform well when interest rates are falling or expected to fall, as it doesn’t pay a yield; lower bond yields can make it look better by comparison.
When gold prices rise, big producers can look especially attractive because it already has mines running, cash coming in, and room to return money to shareholders instead of constantly begging the market for it. So, let’s look at the outlook of one major gold stock.
Kinross Gold (TSX:K) is one of the larger, more established gold producers Canadians can buy without leaving home. It runs a portfolio of long-life assets across the Americas and West Africa, and it has spent the last year leaning hard into a simple message: steady operations, disciplined costs, and lots of free cash flow.
The biggest headline from the past year has been just how aggressively Kinross has pushed capital back to shareholders as cash piled up. In its third-quarter update, the gold stock lifted its 2025 share buyback target to $600 million and raised its quarterly dividend by 17% to $0.19 annually. It also moved to redeem US$500 million of notes due in 2027 early, which sends a clear signal about balance sheet confidence.
More recently, Kinross leaned into growth. In mid-January, it said it will proceed with construction on three organic projects in its U.S. portfolio: Round Mountain Phase X, Kettle River-Curlew, and Bald Mountain Redbird 2. Kinross said these projects should add about three million ounces of life-of-mine production, extend mine lives in Nevada well into the 2030s, and improve long-term U.S. costs. It also framed the economics as strong, with a US$4,300 gold price. That is a punchy set of numbers, even with the usual mining caveats.
Now, let’s get into recent earnings. In the third quarter ended Sept. 30, 2025, Kinross produced 503,862 gold equivalent ounces. It reported production cost of sales of US$1,150 per ounce sold and an all-in sustaining cost of US$1,622 per ounce sold. It also posted operating cash flow of US$1.024 billion and attributable free cash flow of US$686.7 million, which the gold stock called a record.
Profitability also looked strong in that quarter. Kinross reported earnings of US$584.9 million, or US$0.48 per share, and adjusted net earnings of US$0.44 per share. Just as important, it said it reached a net cash position of US$485 million, with roughly US$1.7 billion in cash and total liquidity around US$3.4 billion. For a miner, that balance sheet means it can still keep investing, even if gold prices swing.


