AGNICO EAGLE REPORTS FIRST QUARTER 2026 RESULTS, INCLUDING RECORD QUARTERLY OPERATING MARGINS AND ADJUSTED NET INCOME

B

Stock Symbol: AEM (NYSE and TSX)

(All amounts expressed in U.S. dollars unless otherwise noted)

TORONTO, April 30, 2026 /PRNewswire/ – Agnico Eagle Mines Limited (NYSE: AEM) (TSX: AEM) (“Agnico Eagle” or the “Company”) today reported financial and operating results for the first quarter of 2026.

“We delivered a solid start to 2026, achieving record operating margins while production and costs tracked well to plan. With gold production expected to be weighted to a stronger second half of the year, we are managing cost volatility through disciplined execution and asset optimization, supported by our regional operating model. This positions us well to deliver on our full year guidance,” said Ammar Al-Joundi, Agnico Eagle’s President and Chief Executive Officer. “We are excited by the strong progress across our industry leading growth pipeline and are beginning to look beyond the 20–30% production growth already expected over the next decade, with our recently announced proposed acquisitions in Finland marking a milestone in our next phase of long-term growth. At the same time, we remain committed to returning value to shareholders, through our dividend and the expansion of our share repurchase program.”

First quarter 2026 highlights:

  • Solid quarterly performance, in line with plan – Payable gold production1 was 825,109 ounces, representing approximately 24% of the mid-point of the full year production guidance, at production costs per ounce of $1,158, total cash costs per ounce2 of $1,093 and all-in sustaining costs (“AISC”) per ounce2 of $1,483. The solid operating performance was led by Detour Lake, Canadian Malartic and Fosterville
  • Record quarterly operating margins and adjusted net income – Solid production, combined with higher realized gold prices of $4,861 per ounce in the first quarter, resulted in record operating margins and adjusted net income. The Company reported quarterly net income of $1,695 million or $3.39 per share and record adjusted net income3 of $1,706 million or $3.41 per share. The Company generated cash provided by operating activities of $1,346 million or $2.69 per share and free cash flow3 of $732 million or $1.46 per share, which included the impact of a $1.3 billion payment for the remaining cash tax liability related to the 2025 taxation year. Total cash taxes paid in the first quarter were $1.8 billion, approximately 50% of the expected cash taxes for 2026
  • Financial strength continues to grow through robust cash generation – The Company increased its cash balance by $246 million to $3,112 million as at March 31, 2026, resulting in a net cash4 position of $2,915 million with total debt outstanding of $197 million as at March 31, 2026. Reflecting this strong financial profile, Fitch Ratings upgraded the Company’s long-term issuer default rating from BBB+ to A‑ in April 2026
  • Annual gold production and cost guidance reiterated – Full year expected payable gold production in 2026 remains unchanged at 3.3 to 3.5 million ounces, with production now weighted approximately 48% to the first half of the year and 52% to the second half. Full year total cash costs per ounce and AISC per ounce in 2026 remain unchanged at $1,020 to $1,120 and $1,400 to $1,550, respectively. While the Company is subject to cost uncertainty, including fuel price volatility as a result of ongoing geopolitical events, the Company’s regional operating strategy, focused on local procurement and resilient supply chains, is expected to mitigate potential cost impacts. Further details are set out in the 2026 Guidance Summary section below
  • Continued commitment to shareholder returns and expected renewal and increase of NCIB – The Company returned a total of $375 million to shareholders during the first quarter of 2026, including the declaration of a quarterly dividend of $0.45 per share and the repurchase of 721,211 common shares under its normal course issuer bid (“NCIB”). Share repurchases were completed at an average price of $207.68 per share for total consideration of $150 million. As previously disclosed, the Company intends to seek approval from the TSX to renew the NCIB for another year on substantially the same terms, with an increase to its internal limit on purchases of common shares to $2 billion. Additional details will be provided at the time of the renewal
  • 2025 Sustainability Report published – The Company released its 17th annual Sustainability Report on April 30, 2026, demonstrating its commitment to operating in a safe, sustainable and environmentally responsible manner
  • Update on key value drivers and pipeline projects in the first quarter of 2026
    • Canadian Malartic – Production from the East Gouldie ramp commenced in March 2026. The development and construction activities continued to progress on schedule, with the main ramp and shaft #1 reaching a depth of 1,151 metres and 1,514 metres, respectively. Construction of the first loading station is on schedule for first production through shaft #1 in the second quarter of 2027. Exploration drilling continued to yield positive results in multiple areas of the Odyssey mine, including 6.7 grams per tonne (“g/t”) gold over 36.0 metres at 1,089 metres depth in the upper eastern portion of the East Gouldie deposit and 9.0 g/t gold over 53.5 metres (core length) at 1,067 metres depth in the internal zones of the Odyssey deposit
    • Detour Lake – Development activities for the underground project continued, with the exploration ramp reaching a depth of 147 metres and overburden removal commencing for the conveyor‑ramp portal. High-intensity drilling from surface near the exploration ramp was initiated, with a highlight intercept of 8.9 g/t gold over 14.1 metres at 187 metres depth. Drilling into the West Extension zone had highlights of 10.7 g/t gold over 10.1 metres at 497 metres depth, approximately 1.5 kilometres west of the resource-pit outline, and 10.0 g/t gold over 3.1 metres at 922 metres depth, approximately 2.5 kilometres west of the resource-pit outline
    • Upper Beaver – Development of the exploration ramp and shaft continued to advance ahead of schedule, reaching depths of 108 metres and 382 metres, respectively. During the quarter, the Company initiated a high‑intensity drilling program targeting a portion of the Upper Beaver deposit between approximately 500 and 600 metres depth, characterized by intrusion‑suite host rocks, to complement the bulk sample planned at the 760 level
    • Hope Bay – Project activities focused on site preparedness for a potential redevelopment, including the addition of a new third wing to the camp, substantial completion of the internal technical evaluation, including advancement of detailed engineering to approximately 55%, and planning for the 2026 sealift season. A construction decision at Hope Bay is expected in May 2026
    • San Nicolás – Minas de San Nicolás, which has the potential for base metal production in Mexico, continued to advance engineering and execution strategy, targeting completion of 50% of the engineering by mid-year 2026. Drilling activities progressed with a focus on condemnation drilling and geological evaluation in proximity to the projected mine area
  • Proposed consolidation of Finland’s Central Lapland Greenstone Belt (“CLGB”) in three separate transactions – On April 20, 2026, the Company announced a comprehensive consolidation of properties in the CLGB of Northern Finland through the proposed acquisitions of Rupert Resources Ltd. (“Rupert”) and Aurion Resources Ltd. (“Aurion”) and the acquisition of the 70% interest in Fingold Ventures Ltd. held by B2Gold Corp (“B2Gold”). The Company expects the Rupert and Aurion transactions to be completed late in the second quarter of 2026. The transaction with B2Gold was completed in April 2026
    • Through these transactions, the Company expects to build another multi-asset, multi-decade regional platform within its portfolio, create significant value at the Ikkari gold project by leveraging over 20 years of regional experience and unlock multi-layered exploration potential across the consolidated 2,492 km2 land package
    • It establishes a pathway to transform its Finland platform into an approximately 500,000‑ounce‑per‑year gold production hub within the next decade, and contribute beyond the 20-30% Company‑wide production growth over that period
    • The Company will evaluate opportunities to reduce dilution associated with the Rupert transaction, including potentially returning the proceeds of portfolio investment sales to shareholders through share repurchases under the NCIB

______________________________________

1 Payable production of a mineral means the quantity of a mineral produced during a period contained in products that have been or will be sold by the Company whether such products are shipped during the period or held as inventory at the end of the period.

2 Total cash costs per ounce and all-in sustaining costs per ounce (or AISC per ounce) are non-GAAP measures that are not standardized financial measures under IFRS® Accounting Standards and in this news release, unless otherwise specified, are reported on (i) a per ounce of gold production basis, and (ii) a by-product basis. For reconciliations of each of these non-GAAP measures to production costs on both a by-product and a co-product basis and a description of their composition and usefulness, see “Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance” below.

3 Adjusted net income, free cash flow and where applicable, their related per share measures are non-GAAP measures that are not standardized financial measures under IFRS Accounting Standards. For a description of the composition and usefulness of these non-GAAP measures and a reconciliation to the most comparable measure prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, see “Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance” below.

4 Net cash is a non-GAAP measure that is not a standardized financial measure under IFRS Accounting Standards. For a description of the composition and usefulness of this non-GAAP measure and a reconciliation to the most comparable measure prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, see “Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance” below.

First Quarter 2026 Results Conference Call and Webcast Tomorrow

The Company’s senior management will host a conference call on Friday, May 1, 2026, at 8:30 AM (E.D.T.) to discuss the Company’s financial and operating results.

Via Webcast:

To listen to the live webcast of the conference call, you may register on the Company’s website at www.agnicoeagle.com, or directly via the link here.

Via Phone:

To join the conference call by phone, please dial 437-900-0527 or toll-free 1-888-510-2154 to be entered into the call by an operator. To ensure your participation, please call approximately five minutes prior to the scheduled start of the call.

To join the conference call by phone without operator assistance, you may register your phone number here 30 minutes prior to the scheduled start of the call to receive an automated call back.

Replay Archive:

Please dial 289-819-1450 or toll-free 1-888-660-6345, access code 72715#. The conference call replay will expire on June 1, 2026.

The webcast, along with presentation slides, will be archived for 180 days on the Company’s website.

Annual Meeting

The Company will host its Annual and Special Meeting of Shareholders (the “AGM”) on Friday, May 1, 2026 at 11:00 AM (E.D.T). During the AGM, management will provide an overview of the Company’s activities.

The AGM will be held in person at Arcadian Court, 401 Bay Street, Simpson Tower, 8th Floor, Toronto, Ontario, M5H 2Y4 and online at: https://meetnow.global/M59UWL4.

For details explaining how to attend, communicate and vote virtually at the AGM see the Company’s Management Information Circular dated March 19, 2026, filed under the Company’s profile on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and on EDGAR at www.sec.gov. Shareholders who have questions about voting their shares or attending the AGM may contact Investor Relations by phone at 416-947-1212, by toll-free phone at 1-888-822-6714 or by email at investor.relations@agnicoeagle.com or may contact the Company’s strategic shareholder advisor and proxy solicitation agent, Laurel Hill Advisory Group, by calling 1-877-452-7184 (toll-free in Canada and the United States) or 1-416-304-0211 (International), by texting “INFO” to either number, or by e-mail at assistance@laurelhill.com.

First Quarter 2026 Production and Costs

Production and Cost Results Summary

Three Months Ended

March 31,

2026

2025*

Gold production** (ounces)

825,109

873,794

Gold sales (ounces)***

829,651

842,965

Production costs per ounce

$       1,158

$         879

Total cash costs per ounce

$       1,093

$         895

AISC per ounce

$       1,483

$      1,175

*   

Total cash costs per ounce and AISC per ounce for the three months ended March 31, 2025 have been restated using the Company’s revised composition for periods commencing on or after January 1, 2026. Using the Company’s composition of this measure for periods ending on or prior to December 31, 2025, total cash costs per ounce were $903 for the consolidated Company and AISC per ounce was $1,183 for the consolidated Company.

**   

Gold production for the three months ended March 31, 2026 excludes payable gold production at La India and Creston Mascota of 418 and 76 ounces, respectively, which were produced from residual leaching. Gold production for the three months ended March 31, 2025 excludes payable gold production at La India and Creston Mascota of 1,811 ounces and 25 ounces, respectively, which were producing from residual leaching.

*** 

Payable metals sold at Canadian Malartic, Detour Lake and Macassa exclude the in-kind royalties of 5.0%, 2.0% and 1.5%, respectively, paid in respect of gold production at such mines. For the three months ended March 31, 2025, payable metals sold excludes 2,500 payable gold ounces sold at La India.

Gold Production

Gold production decreased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to lower production at Macassa and Meadowbank (lower grades), partially offset by higher production at Detour Lake (higher grades and recoveries).

Production Costs per Ounce

Production costs per ounce increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to higher royalty costs resulting from higher gold prices, lower gold production and the impact of a stronger Canadian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar between periods.

Total Cash Costs per Ounce

Total cash costs per ounce increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to the reasons described above for the increase in production costs per ounce.

AISC per Ounce

AISC per ounce increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period due to the reasons described above for the increase in total cash costs per ounce, higher sustaining capital expenditures, primarily at Macassa and Fosterville, higher non-cash reclamation related costs and higher general and administrative expenses.

Refer to the Company’s Management Discussion & Analysis for the first quarter of 2026 (the “MD&A”) under the caption “Financial and Operating Results” for additional variance analysis on gold production, production costs, minesite costs per tonne and total cash costs per ounce compared to the prior-year period.

First Quarter 2026 Financial Results

Financial Results Summary

Three Months Ended

March 31,

2026

2025

Realized gold price (per ounce)5

$      4,861

$      2,891

Net income (millions)

$      1,695

$        815

Adjusted net income (millions)

$      1,706

$        770

EBITDA (millions)6

$      2,996

$      1,634

Adjusted EBITDA (millions)6

$      3,011

$      1,590

Cash provided by operating activities (millions)

$      1,346

$      1,044

Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital (millions)6

$      2,231

$      1,209

Capital expenditures* (millions)6

$        574

$        419

Free cash flow (millions)

$        732

$        594

Free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital (millions)6

$      1,618

$        759

Net income per share (basic)

$       3.39

$       1.62

Adjusted net income per share (basic)

$       3.41

$       1.53

Cash provided by operating activities per share (basic)

$       2.69

$       2.08

Cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital per share (basic)

$       4.46

$       2.41

Free cash flow per share (basic)

$       1.46

$       1.18

Free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital per share (basic)

$       3.23

$       1.51

*Includes capitalized exploration

 

_________________________

5 Realized gold price is calculated as gold revenues from mining operations divided by the number of ounces sold.

6 “EBITDA” means earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization. EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA, capital expenditures, cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital and free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital and, where applicable, their related per share measures, are non-GAAP measures that are not standardized measures under IFRS Accounting Standards. For a description of the composition and usefulness of these non-GAAP measures and a reconciliation to the most comparable measure prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, see “Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance” below.

Net Income

Net income increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to record operating margins resulting from higher realized gold prices, partially offset by lower gold sales and higher income and mining taxes.

Net income in the first quarter of 2026 of $1,695 million ($3.39 per share) includes the following items (net of tax): reclamation adjustments of $9 million ($0.02 per share), net gains on derivative financial instruments of $7 million ($0.01 per share), net asset disposal losses of $7 million ($0.01 per share), foreign currency translation losses on deferred tax liabilities of $5 million ($0.01 per share) and other adjustments totaling $3 million ($0.01 per share). Excluding these items results in adjusted net income of $1,706 million or $3.41 per share for the first quarter of 2026.

Adjusted EBITDA

Adjusted EBITDA increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to higher revenues from mining operations (higher realized gold prices partially offset by lower gold sales), partially offset by higher production costs (higher royalty costs), higher general and administrative expenses and the impact of a stronger Canadian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar between periods.

Cash Provided by Operating Activities

Cash provided by operating activities and cash provided by operating activities before changes in non-cash components of working capital both increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to higher operating margins, partially offset by lower gold sales and higher income and mining taxes. Cash provided by operating activities was reduced by unfavourable changes in non-cash working capital balances primarily due to approximately $1.3 billion in cash taxes paid in the quarter relating to the 2025 taxation year. Total cash taxes paid in the first quarter of 2026 were $1.8 billion, representing approximately 50% of the expected cash taxes for 2026.

Free Cash Flow

Free cash flow and free cash flow before changes in non-cash components of working capital both increased in the first quarter of 2026 when compared to the prior-year period primarily due to the reasons described above related to cash provided by operating activities, partially offset by higher development capital expenditures related to Odyssey, Hope Bay and Detour Lake underground pipeline projects.

Capital Expenditures

The table below sets out a summary of capital expenditures, in each case broken down between sustaining capital expenditures and development capital expenditures by mine, and capitalized exploration in the first quarter of 2026.

Summary of Capital Expenditures

(thousands)

Three Months Ended

Mar 31, 2026

Capital

Expenditures*

Capitalized

Exploration

Sustaining Capital Expenditures**

LaRonde

$          15,661

$           1,232

Canadian Malartic

22,761

987

Goldex

10,105

200

Quebec

48,527

2,419

Detour Lake

42,531

Macassa

19,545

827

Ontario

62,076

827

Meliadine

16,310

1,425

Meadowbank

23,155

Nunavut

39,465

1,425

Fosterville

22,540

496

Australia

22,540

496

Kittila

13,167

982

Finland

13,167

982

Pinos Altos

8,756

211

Mexico

8,756

211

Other

2,061

(973)

Total Sustaining Capital Expenditures

$        196,592

$          5,387

Development Capital Expenditures**

LaRonde

$          20,397

$               —

Canadian Malartic

85,092

7,519

Goldex

6,080

1,997

Quebec

111,569

9,516

Detour Lake

73,444

6,621

Detour Lake underground

4,266

12,274

Macassa

24,510

8,819

Upper Beaver

7,316

16,595

Ontario

109,536

44,309

Meliadine

18,374

4,181

Meadowbank

9,174

22

Hope Bay

31,764

13,834

Nunavut

59,312

18,037

Fosterville

4,314

3,477

Australia

4,314

3,477

Kittila

946

2,600

Finland

946

2,600

Pinos Altos

1,821

11

San Nicolás (50%)

1,326

1,391

Mexico

3,147

1,402

Other

3,466

Total Development Capital Expenditures

$         292,290

$          79,341

Total Capital Expenditures

$         488,882

$          84,728

Excludes capitalized exploration

**   

Sustaining capital expenditures and development capital expenditure are non-GAAP measures that are not standardized measures under IFRS Accounting Standards. For a description of the composition and usefulness of these non-GAAP measures and a reconciliation to the most comparable measure prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards, see “Note Regarding Certain Measures of Performance” below.

2026 Guidance Reiterated

In the first three months of 2026, the Company achieved approximately 24% of the mid-point of its full year gold production guidance, while achieving total cash costs per ounce and AISC per ounce within the guidance range. Based on these results, the Company is reiterating its guidance for the full year 2026. Full year expected payable gold production in 2026 at 3.3 to 3.5 million ounces is now weighted approximately 48% to the first half of the year and 52% to the second half.

 A summary of the Company’s guidance is set out below.

2026 Guidance Summary

($ millions, unless otherwise stated)

2026

2026

Guidance Range

Mid-Point

Gold production (thousands of ounces)

3,300

3,500

3,400

Total cash costs per ounce7

$     1,020

$      1,120

$     1,070

AISC per ounce7

$     1,400

$      1,550

$     1,475

Capital expenditures7 (excluding capitalized exploration)

$     2,175

$      2,395

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