Welcome to our dedicated page for Centerra Gold SEC filings (Ticker: CGAU), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
Centerra Gold Inc. filings document the U.S. regulatory disclosures of a Canadian foreign private issuer reporting on Form 40-F and furnishing current reports on Form 6-K. The record includes annual reports with an annual information form, audited financial statements and MD&A, along with interim financial statements, MD&A and officer certifications for its mining operations and project portfolio.
Company filings also cover dividend declarations, quarterly operating and financial results, management information circulars, annual meeting voting outcomes, executive changes and supply-chain compliance reporting under Canadian forced labour and child labour legislation. These documents address governance, shareholder voting, capital-return actions, financial reporting and risk disclosures tied to Centerra’s gold, copper and molybdenum activities.
Centerra Gold Inc. filed its Annual Report on Form 40-F for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2025, reporting 199,806,355 Common Shares outstanding as of December 31, 2025. The company’s financial statements are prepared in accordance with IFRS and mineral disclosures follow NI 43-101, which differ from U.S. SEC requirements.
The CEO and CFO concluded that disclosure controls and internal control over financial reporting were effective as of year-end, and KPMG LLP attested to those controls.
Centerra Gold Inc. has filed its 2025 annual report on Form 40-F with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The filing includes the company’s 2025 annual information form, annual audited financial statements, and management’s discussion and analysis. These documents are available on EDGAR in the U.S., on SEDAR+ in Canada, and on Centerra’s website. Shareholders can also request hard copies of the audited financial statements and notes free of charge.
Centerra Gold Inc. submitted a Form 6-K as a foreign private issuer to provide investors with a new technical report on its Kemess Project in north-central British Columbia. The report, dated March 4, 2026, is attached as Exhibit 99.1 and incorporated by reference into this filing.
Centerra Gold Inc. filed a technical report for its Kemess Project in British Columbia, Canada, prepared under National Instrument 43-101 standards for mineral project disclosure. The report supports information previously described in a news release dated January 19, 2026 and is now available on Centerra’s website and on SEDAR+.
Centerra is a Canadian-based gold mining company with operating mines at Mount Milligan in British Columbia and Öksüt in Türkiye, and ownership of the Kemess and Goldfield projects plus a Molybdenum Business Unit in the United States and Canada. Its shares trade on the TSX under CG and on the NYSE under CGAU.
Centerra Gold Inc. reported sharply stronger 2025 results, with revenue of $1,384,562,000 and net earnings of $583,988,000, up from $80,394,000 in 2024. Basic earnings per share rose to $2.85 from $0.38.
Results were boosted by a net impairment reversal of $341,110,000, including reversals at the Kemess and Goldfield projects, and a gain on the Greenstone Partnership sale. Cash from operating activities increased to $348,632,000, funding $253,612,000 of capital additions and share repurchases of 11.5 million shares.
Year-end cash and cash equivalents were $528,931,000. KPMG LLP issued unqualified opinions on both the consolidated financial statements and the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2025.
Centerra Gold Inc. reported sharply stronger 2025 results, with revenue of $1,384,562,000 and net earnings of $583,988,000, up from $80,394,000 in 2024. Basic earnings per share rose to $2.85 from $0.38.
Results were boosted by a net impairment reversal of $341,110,000, including reversals at the Kemess and Goldfield projects, and a gain on the Greenstone Partnership sale. Cash from operating activities increased to $348,632,000, funding $253,612,000 of capital additions and share repurchases of 11.5 million shares.
Year-end cash and cash equivalents were $528,931,000. KPMG LLP issued unqualified opinions on both the consolidated financial statements and the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2025.
Centerra Gold Inc. reported sharply stronger 2025 results, with revenue of $1,384,562,000 and net earnings of $583,988,000, up from $80,394,000 in 2024. Basic earnings per share rose to $2.85 from $0.38.
Results were boosted by a net impairment reversal of $341,110,000, including reversals at the Kemess and Goldfield projects, and a gain on the Greenstone Partnership sale. Cash from operating activities increased to $348,632,000, funding $253,612,000 of capital additions and share repurchases of 11.5 million shares.
Year-end cash and cash equivalents were $528,931,000. KPMG LLP issued unqualified opinions on both the consolidated financial statements and the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2025.
Centerra Gold Inc. reported that its Board of Directors has approved a quarterly dividend of C$0.07 per common share, totaling approximately C$14.0 million or US$10.2 million. The dividend will be paid on March 26, 2026 to shareholders of record at the close of business on March 12, 2026.
The dividend is designated as an eligible dividend for Canadian income tax purposes. Centerra notes that future dividends will continue to be set by the Board in line with its dividend policy, considering operating results, cash flow, financial condition, capital needs, and broader business conditions.
Centerra Gold Inc. reported that its Board of Directors has approved a quarterly dividend of C$0.07 per common share, totaling approximately C$14.0 million or US$10.2 million. The dividend will be paid on March 26, 2026 to shareholders of record at the close of business on March 12, 2026.
The dividend is designated as an eligible dividend for Canadian income tax purposes. Centerra notes that future dividends will continue to be set by the Board in line with its dividend policy, considering operating results, cash flow, financial condition, capital needs, and broader business conditions.
Centerra Gold Inc. reported that its Board of Directors has approved a quarterly dividend of C$0.07 per common share, totaling approximately C$14.0 million or US$10.2 million. The dividend will be paid on March 26, 2026 to shareholders of record at the close of business on March 12, 2026.
The dividend is designated as an eligible dividend for Canadian income tax purposes. Centerra notes that future dividends will continue to be set by the Board in line with its dividend policy, considering operating results, cash flow, financial condition, capital needs, and broader business conditions.
Centerra Gold reported a major upgrade to its 2025 year-end mineral inventory. Proven and probable gold reserves rose 58% year-over-year to 5.5 million ounces, while proven and probable copper reserves increased 49% to 1.7 billion pounds as of December 31, 2025.
Total measured and indicated gold resources inclusive of reserves reached 10.8 million ounces, and measured and indicated copper resources were 3.6 billion pounds. The increases are driven mainly by drilling and updated studies at Mount Milligan, Kemess and Goldfield, where multiple long intercepts of gold-copper mineralization support potential mine life extensions.
Centerra plans 2026 exploration spending of $40–$50 million, split roughly evenly between brownfield work at Mount Milligan, Kemess and Öksüt and greenfield programs in Canada, the United States and Türkiye. Management highlights Mount Milligan as a 20-year cornerstone asset with meaningful low-cost gold and copper production and significant exploration upside.
Centerra Gold reported a major upgrade to its 2025 year-end mineral inventory. Proven and probable gold reserves rose 58% year-over-year to 5.5 million ounces, while proven and probable copper reserves increased 49% to 1.7 billion pounds as of December 31, 2025.
Total measured and indicated gold resources inclusive of reserves reached 10.8 million ounces, and measured and indicated copper resources were 3.6 billion pounds. The increases are driven mainly by drilling and updated studies at Mount Milligan, Kemess and Goldfield, where multiple long intercepts of gold-copper mineralization support potential mine life extensions.
Centerra plans 2026 exploration spending of $40–$50 million, split roughly evenly between brownfield work at Mount Milligan, Kemess and Öksüt and greenfield programs in Canada, the United States and Türkiye. Management highlights Mount Milligan as a 20-year cornerstone asset with meaningful low-cost gold and copper production and significant exploration upside.
Centerra Gold reported a major upgrade to its 2025 year-end mineral inventory. Proven and probable gold reserves rose 58% year-over-year to 5.5 million ounces, while proven and probable copper reserves increased 49% to 1.7 billion pounds as of December 31, 2025.
Total measured and indicated gold resources inclusive of reserves reached 10.8 million ounces, and measured and indicated copper resources were 3.6 billion pounds. The increases are driven mainly by drilling and updated studies at Mount Milligan, Kemess and Goldfield, where multiple long intercepts of gold-copper mineralization support potential mine life extensions.
Centerra plans 2026 exploration spending of $40–$50 million, split roughly evenly between brownfield work at Mount Milligan, Kemess and Öksüt and greenfield programs in Canada, the United States and Türkiye. Management highlights Mount Milligan as a 20-year cornerstone asset with meaningful low-cost gold and copper production and significant exploration upside.
Centerra Gold reported a much stronger 2025, combining solid mine performance with a growing project pipeline. Full-year revenue reached $1.38B, up 14%, on consolidated production of 275,316 ounces of gold and 50.5 million pounds of copper, both broadly in line with guidance.
Net earnings jumped to $584.0M, or $2.85 per share, helped by non-cash impairment reversals, while adjusted net earnings were $228.6M and adjusted EBITDA $448.4M. All-in sustaining costs on a by-product basis averaged $1,614 per ounce of gold, below 2025 cost guidance, and year-end liquidity was strong at $928.9M, including $528.9M of cash and an undrawn $400.0M credit facility.
The company returned capital through $93.7M of share buybacks, about 5% of outstanding shares, and $41.1M in dividends. For 2026, Centerra guides to 250,000–280,000 ounces of gold and 50–60 million pounds of copper, with higher cost ranges but continued robust cash flow expected from Mount Milligan and Öksüt.
Growth projects advanced meaningfully. A PEA for Kemess outlined an after-tax NPV5% of $1.1B and 16% IRR at long-term prices, while Goldfield’s study showed an after-tax NPV5% of $245M and 30% IRR with first production targeted by the end of 2028. Mount Milligan’s life-of-mine was extended to 2045 with an after-tax NPV5% of about $1.5B. Thompson Creek’s restart continues, with total capital now estimated at $425M–$450M and first production planned for mid-2027.
The main operational setback was a January 2026 explosion near the acid plant at the Langeloth metallurgical facility, which led to a temporary suspension. Repairs are estimated at $5–$10M, with full operations expected to resume by May 2026.
Centerra Gold reported a much stronger 2025, combining solid mine performance with a growing project pipeline. Full-year revenue reached $1.38B, up 14%, on consolidated production of 275,316 ounces of gold and 50.5 million pounds of copper, both broadly in line with guidance.
Net earnings jumped to $584.0M, or $2.85 per share, helped by non-cash impairment reversals, while adjusted net earnings were $228.6M and adjusted EBITDA $448.4M. All-in sustaining costs on a by-product basis averaged $1,614 per ounce of gold, below 2025 cost guidance, and year-end liquidity was strong at $928.9M, including $528.9M of cash and an undrawn $400.0M credit facility.
The company returned capital through $93.7M of share buybacks, about 5% of outstanding shares, and $41.1M in dividends. For 2026, Centerra guides to 250,000–280,000 ounces of gold and 50–60 million pounds of copper, with higher cost ranges but continued robust cash flow expected from Mount Milligan and Öksüt.
Growth projects advanced meaningfully. A PEA for Kemess outlined an after-tax NPV5% of $1.1B and 16% IRR at long-term prices, while Goldfield’s study showed an after-tax NPV5% of $245M and 30% IRR with first production targeted by the end of 2028. Mount Milligan’s life-of-mine was extended to 2045 with an after-tax NPV5% of about $1.5B. Thompson Creek’s restart continues, with total capital now estimated at $425M–$450M and first production planned for mid-2027.
The main operational setback was a January 2026 explosion near the acid plant at the Langeloth metallurgical facility, which led to a temporary suspension. Repairs are estimated at $5–$10M, with full operations expected to resume by May 2026.
Centerra Gold reported a much stronger 2025, combining solid mine performance with a growing project pipeline. Full-year revenue reached $1.38B, up 14%, on consolidated production of 275,316 ounces of gold and 50.5 million pounds of copper, both broadly in line with guidance.
Net earnings jumped to $584.0M, or $2.85 per share, helped by non-cash impairment reversals, while adjusted net earnings were $228.6M and adjusted EBITDA $448.4M. All-in sustaining costs on a by-product basis averaged $1,614 per ounce of gold, below 2025 cost guidance, and year-end liquidity was strong at $928.9M, including $528.9M of cash and an undrawn $400.0M credit facility.
The company returned capital through $93.7M of share buybacks, about 5% of outstanding shares, and $41.1M in dividends. For 2026, Centerra guides to 250,000–280,000 ounces of gold and 50–60 million pounds of copper, with higher cost ranges but continued robust cash flow expected from Mount Milligan and Öksüt.
Growth projects advanced meaningfully. A PEA for Kemess outlined an after-tax NPV5% of $1.1B and 16% IRR at long-term prices, while Goldfield’s study showed an after-tax NPV5% of $245M and 30% IRR with first production targeted by the end of 2028. Mount Milligan’s life-of-mine was extended to 2045 with an after-tax NPV5% of about $1.5B. Thompson Creek’s restart continues, with total capital now estimated at $425M–$450M and first production planned for mid-2027.
The main operational setback was a January 2026 explosion near the acid plant at the Langeloth metallurgical facility, which led to a temporary suspension. Repairs are estimated at $5–$10M, with full operations expected to resume by May 2026.
Donald Smith & Co., Inc. and DSCO Value Fund, L.P. filed a Schedule 13G reporting beneficial ownership of 14,158,116 common shares of Centerra Gold Inc., representing about 7.02% of the class as of 12/31/2025.
Donald Smith & Co., Inc. has sole voting power over 13,744,315 shares and sole dispositive power over 14,028,025 shares, while DSCO Value Fund, L.P. has sole voting and dispositive power over 130,091 shares. The filing states the securities are held in the ordinary course of business and not for the purpose of changing or influencing control of the company.
Centerra Gold Inc. temporarily suspended operations at its Langeloth Metallurgical Facility near Pittsburgh following an explosion on January 29, 2026 caused by an uncontrolled mixture of chemicals adjacent to the acid plant. Two contractors were hospitalized with injuries and two employees were hospitalized as a precaution, but no fatalities were reported.
The company states there is presently no indication of a significant environmental release and that relevant regulatory agencies and authorities have been notified. Centerra is assessing the expected downtime at Langeloth and plans to provide an update when more information becomes available.