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Barrick names Hill as CEO and plans to proceed with the IPO of North American assets containing gold

Barrick Mining announced on Thursday that it will move forward with the?preparations of an initial public offering (IPO) of its North American assets, and appointed interim?head Mark Hill as its CEO and President.

The company's shares listed in the United States rose by 2% during premarket trading. The company's Toronto shares dropped 6.7% during morning trading. Analysts said that the market punished the company because of high cost guidance, and the disclosure of the December payout to Mali.

Martin Pradier is an analyst at Veritas Research. He said, "My concern about the cost increase is huge." Mali, when you factor in the payout, is one of Veritas' highest-cost mines. Pradier added that this has increased market concerns.

Barrick reached a settlement with the Mali military government after a dispute that lasted for a full year. The company paid $823 million in total.

MUCH ANTICIPATED IPO Analysts expect that the value of the North American assets of the group will be approximately $42 billion.

Barrick appointed veteran executive Hill in September as interim president after the sudden resignation Mark Bristow.

Barrick has said that the IPO should be completed in late 2026. It will include Barrick's interest in Nevada Gold Mines in the Dominican Republic, Pueblo Viejo project in Nevada and its wholly-owned Fourmile project.

CEO Hill stated during a call following the earnings that between 10-15% of North American assets would be put up for an IPO.

Barrick intends to retain a controlling interest in the new entity after the listing.

Gold prices increased and helped the company to beat Wall Street's expectations for its fourth-quarter profits.

According to data compiled and analyzed by LSEG, the gold miner's adjusted?profit per share was $1.04 for the three-month period ended December 31. This compares with an average analyst estimate 90 cents.

The miner did not provide any further details, but said that one person died following an injury in its Bulyanhulu mine in Tanzania in October and another died in December, after having been injured in its Kibali mine in Democratic Republic of Congo in June. Barrick has said that it conducted thorough investigations into these deaths and taken steps to improve safety.

Barrick?reported a death in Nevada Gold Mines, back in September.

The company's revenue for the fourth quarter was $6 billion, up by 65% compared to a year ago. This is due to rising gold prices and record production. The company bought back $500 million worth of shares during the fourth quarter. This brings the total share purchase up to $1.5 billion by 2025. Investors received quarterly dividends of 42 cents a share.

Barrick has guided its gold production for 2026 to be 2.90-3.25 millions ounces. This is similar to the production in 2025. The company projected that its 2026 all-in-sustaining costs would be between $1,760 and $1950 per ounce, assuming a gold price around $4,500 an ounce. Reporting by Tanay in Bengaluru and Divya in Toronto. Editing by Sriraj, Susan Fenton and Rod Nickel.

(source: Reuters)