Welcome to our dedicated page for Kinross Gold SEC filings (Ticker: KGC), 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.
Kinross Gold Corporation (KGC) files its U.S. regulatory disclosure as a foreign private issuer, primarily through annual reports on Form 40-F and current reports on Form 6-K. This SEC filings page brings together those documents, along with AI-generated summaries, to help investors understand the company’s gold mining operations, financial performance and corporate actions.
Kinross uses Form 6-K to furnish a wide range of information to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. These filings typically include press releases on quarterly and year-to-date financial and operating results, such as gold equivalent ounces produced and sold, production cost of sales per gold equivalent ounce, all-in sustaining cost per gold equivalent ounce, operating cash flow, free cash flow and net earnings. They also provide access to interim financial statements and Management’s Discussion and Analysis for periods such as the quarter ended September 30, 2025.
Other 6-K submissions incorporate press releases on project developments and corporate finance actions. Examples include announcements about Round Mountain Phase X, Kettle River-Curlew and Bald Mountain Redbird 2, dividend declarations, share repurchase programs, early redemption of Senior Notes and credit rating changes such as the Moody’s upgrade to a Baa2 senior unsecured rating. Kinross also files early warning reports related to its investment in Asante Gold Corporation, detailing share sales, ownership percentages and convertible instruments.
On this page, each new Kinross 6-K or 40-F is captured as it appears on EDGAR. AI-powered summaries highlight key points from lengthy documents, explain technical terms and draw attention to items such as changes in production metrics, cost trends, capital expenditures, debt levels, liquidity and capital return decisions. Users can also review filings that reference insider and executive certifications, such as CEO and CFO certifications of interim filings.
Whether you are looking for Kinross’ latest quarterly results, details on project economics, information on debt redemptions or disclosures about equity investments, this filings page provides a structured view of the company’s regulatory record with tools to make complex mining and financial data easier to interpret.
Kinross Gold Corporation posted a very strong first quarter of 2026 as soaring gold prices drove record profitability and cash generation. Metal sales rose to $2,407.7 million, up 61% from a year earlier, as the average realized gold price jumped 71% to $4,873 per ounce despite slightly lower gold equivalent production.
Operating earnings more than doubled to $1,338.1 million, while net earnings attributable to common shareholders climbed to $843.0 million, or $0.70 per share, compared with $368.0 million and $0.30 a year ago. Net cash flow from operating activities increased to $1,139.5 million, supporting attributable free cash flow of $837.5 million. Cash and cash equivalents grew to $2.19 billion even after $250.1 million of share repurchases and $47.9 million of dividends.
Production cost of sales rose to $690.5 million, or $1,397 per gold equivalent ounce sold, reflecting higher royalties and input costs, but margins expanded sharply because revenue grew much faster than costs. Management reaffirmed 2026 guidance for approximately 2.0 million attributable gold equivalent ounces and cost targets, and highlighted progress at key growth projects including Great Bear, Lobo-Marte, Round Mountain Phase X, Curlew and Bald Mountain Redbird.
Kinross Gold Corporation declared a quarterly cash dividend of US$0.04 per common share for the first quarter of 2026. The dividend will be paid on June 4, 2026 to shareholders who are on record as of the close of business on May 21, 2026.
The payment is designated as an “eligible dividend” for Canadian income tax purposes. Shareholders outside Canada will have their dividends subject to Canadian non-resident withholding taxes. Kinross describes itself as a Canadian-based global senior gold mining company with operations across the Americas and Africa.
Kinross Gold Corporation reported a very strong first quarter of 2026. Revenue rose to $2,407.7 million from $1,497.5 million as the average realized gold price jumped to $4,873 per ounce. Attributable production was 492,563 gold equivalent ounces, down 4% year-over-year as planned.
Margin per gold equivalent ounce sold reached a record $3,476, up 92% from Q1 2025. Operating cash flow increased to $1,139.5 million and attributable free cash flow more than doubled to $837.5 million. Net earnings attributable to common shareholders were $843.0 million, or $0.70 per share, with adjusted net earnings of $854.1 million, or $0.71 per share.
Kinross ended the quarter with $2.2 billion in cash and cash equivalents and total liquidity of about $3.9 billion. The company plans to return 40% of free cash flow to shareholders in 2026 and has returned roughly $350 million so far through buybacks and dividends, while reaffirming full-year production and cost guidance and advancing major projects such as Great Bear, Lobo-Marte, Round Mountain Phase X, Curlew and Bald Mountain Redbird.
Kinross Gold Corporation is warning investors about an unsolicited “mini-tender” offer from TRC Capital Investment Corporation. TRC is seeking to buy up to 2.5 million Kinross common shares, about 0.21% of shares outstanding, at C$41.75 per share, which is approximately 4.4% below the C$43.68 TSX closing price on April 6, 2026.
Kinross states it does not endorse or have any affiliation with TRC and strongly recommends shareholders reject the below-market offer. The company highlights that regulators such as the Canadian Securities Administrators and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission have issued cautions and investor guidance regarding mini-tender offers.
Kinross Gold Corporation is providing materials for its April 30, 2026 virtual-only annual shareholder meeting, where investors will vote on directors, reappoint KPMG LLP as auditors, and consider an advisory “Say on Pay” resolution on executive compensation.
The circular highlights record 2025 results: production of two million gold equivalent ounces, record attributable free cash flow of $2.5 billion, and 2025 total shareholder return of 192%, with three-year total shareholder return of 636%. Kinross returned $752 million to shareholders through dividends and share buybacks, repaid $700 million of debt, and ended 2025 with a net cash position of $1.0 billion, cash and cash equivalents of $1.7 billion, and total liquidity of approximately $3.5 billion. The Board emphasizes strong governance, majority voting for directors, annual “Say on Pay,” and a diverse, largely independent slate of 10 nominees.
Kinross Gold Corporation furnished a Form 6-K to provide investors with its 2025 Annual Report, which was filed on SEDAR+.
The 2025 Annual Report, attached as an exhibit, includes audited financial statements, accompanying notes, and management’s discussion and analysis for the period ended December 31, 2025. The Form 6-K is also incorporated by reference into several existing Form S-8 registration statements.
Kinross Gold Corporation filed a Form 6-K to furnish a new NI 43-101 Technical Report for its wholly owned Paracatu open-pit gold mine in Brazil, supporting updated year-end 2025 Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves.
The report outlines measured and indicated Mineral Resources of 329,197 kt grading 0.33 g/t Au for 3,522 koz, plus inferred resources of 6,383 kt at 0.22 g/t Au for 44 koz, exclusive of reserves. Proven and probable Mineral Reserves total 399,642 kt at 0.38 g/t Au, containing 4,839 koz, supporting life-of-mine through 2034 at a nominal 61 Mt/a throughput.
Since 1987, Paracatu has produced 12.3 Moz of gold and is described as a long-term strategic asset with mature mining and processing operations, robust QA/QC and geometallurgical frameworks, and extensive environmental and social programs. Life-of-mine sustaining capital is estimated at US$653.5 million, including US$109.3 million for tailings dam expansions, with average operating costs of about US$4.8/t mined and US$5.0/t processed.
Kinross Gold Corporation files its annual report on Form 40-F including the Annual Information Form, Management’s Discussion and Analysis, and audited consolidated financial statements as at December 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024.
The filing states that management concluded internal control over financial reporting was effective as of December 31, 2025 and that KPMG LLP issued an attestation on those controls and audited the financial statements. The report discloses 1,199,843,037 common shares outstanding as of December 31, 2025 and lists auditor fees, including C$5,572,000 in audit fees for 2025.
Kinross Gold Corporation is renewing its normal course issuer bid, allowing it to repurchase up to 104,239,211 common shares between March 24, 2026 and March 23, 2027. This represents up to 10% of its 1,042,392,116-share public float, with 1,197,584,004 shares outstanding as of March 12, 2026.
Repurchases may be made on the TSX, NYSE and eligible alternative trading systems, with a daily TSX limit of 1,156,500 shares, and all repurchased shares will be cancelled. Under the prior program, Kinross was authorized to repurchase 110,408,573 shares and bought back 35,756,550 shares. Management views buybacks, alongside its quarterly dividend, as an attractive use of funds supported by an investment grade balance sheet and strong free cash flow.
Kinross Gold Corporation reported a very strong 2025, driven by much higher gold prices and solid operations. Full-year gold equivalent production was 2,012,106 attributable ounces, slightly below 2024, but revenue rose to $7,051.1 million from $5,148.8 million.
Reported net earnings jumped to $2,390.1 million, or $1.96 per share, versus $948.8 million, while attributable free cash flow climbed to $2,473.5 million from $1,340.2 million. Record margins and cash generation allowed Kinross to repay about $700 million of debt, ending 2025 in a net cash position of $1.0 billion with total liquidity of roughly $3.5 billion.
The company returned $752.4 million to shareholders in 2025 through buybacks and dividends, repurchasing $600.3 million of stock and shrinking its share count by 2.5%. The quarterly dividend was raised again to $0.04 per share, a 33% increase since Q3 2025, and Kinross plans to target 40% of free cash flow for capital returns in 2026.
For 2026, Kinross guides to stable attributable production of 2.0 million gold equivalent ounces, with attributable production cost of sales of $1,360 per ounce and all-in sustaining cost of $1,730 per ounce, and expects about $1,500 million of attributable capital expenditures to fund projects such as Great Bear, Round Mountain Phase X, Curlew and Bald Mountain Redbird 2.
Kinross Gold Corporation reported a very strong 2025, driven by much higher gold prices and solid operations. Full-year gold equivalent production was 2,012,106 attributable ounces, slightly below 2024, but revenue rose to $7,051.1 million from $5,148.8 million.
Reported net earnings jumped to $2,390.1 million, or $1.96 per share, versus $948.8 million, while attributable free cash flow climbed to $2,473.5 million from $1,340.2 million. Record margins and cash generation allowed Kinross to repay about $700 million of debt, ending 2025 in a net cash position of $1.0 billion with total liquidity of roughly $3.5 billion.
The company returned $752.4 million to shareholders in 2025 through buybacks and dividends, repurchasing $600.3 million of stock and shrinking its share count by 2.5%. The quarterly dividend was raised again to $0.04 per share, a 33% increase since Q3 2025, and Kinross plans to target 40% of free cash flow for capital returns in 2026.
For 2026, Kinross guides to stable attributable production of 2.0 million gold equivalent ounces, with attributable production cost of sales of $1,360 per ounce and all-in sustaining cost of $1,730 per ounce, and expects about $1,500 million of attributable capital expenditures to fund projects such as Great Bear, Round Mountain Phase X, Curlew and Bald Mountain Redbird 2.