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The dividend of Boliden, a Swedish miner, brightens a slight earnings miss

Boliden announced a dividend that was higher than analysts expected for 2025. This pushed its shares up 4% on Tuesday despite the fact that earnings from the Swedish copper-zinc miner's 4th quarter were lower than expected.

The company that operates seven mines, five smelters, and a smelter in Ireland, Portugal and the Nordic -region proposed a dividend of 11 Swedish Crowns per share. This was higher than LSEG's estimate of 9.6 Crowns. It cancelled its ordinary dividend last year in order to increase its financial?capacity and reduced the value issued by the company later that year to pay for the purchase of two mines.

Boliden’s recent performance was boosted by the?firmer gold price, which has?lifted realized revenue from precious metals that are collected as by-products from its mining flows and smelting flow. The company also benefits from rising zinc prices.

The company's operating profit for the quarter, excluding revaluation process inventory, rose by 6.5% to 4,06 billion crowns (454.4 million dollars), largely due to strong metal prices. However it missed analysts' expectations of 4,13 billion crowns. Boliden stated that the intense rains in Portugal during January caused problems with water management in its Somincor Mine, which was acquired last year. It said that while it maintained the same 2026 guidance for the mine, a total impact on the first-quarter results will depend on weather conditions going forward.

CEO Mikael Stas, speaking to the press after the results, said that Boliden would not be distributing any additional cash this year. This is because Boliden’s leverage ratio (including net reclamation debt) was above the 20% target stated in the dividend policy.

He said, "We have a policy that says we can only consider an additional dividend if the balance is strong."

Boliden has reiterated its plans to invest in 2026.

(source: Reuters)