| More ounces sold into a favorable pricing environment helped earnings and cash flow. |
| Copper was steady, not the surprise | Copper production was 49,000 tonnes, in line with plan | Copper helped the portfolio, but the Q1 earnings surprise was more gold-led than copper-led. |
Barrick explicitly tied the quarter’s stronger earnings to a higher realized gold price . That is the most important point for investors: when gold prices rise faster than costs, a miner’s earnings can expand faster than revenue or production.
The year-over-year comparison also made the percentage increase look dramatic. In Q1 2025, Barrick reported net EPS of $0.27 and adjusted net EPS of $0.35 . In Q1 2026, those figures rose to $0.96 and $0.98, respectively
. That is a major improvement, but it also means the 256% growth rate benefited from the prior-year base.
Cash flow showed the same operating leverage. Barrick reported Q1 2026 operating cash flow of $2.55 billion, up 111% year over year .
Barrick’s gold output came in ahead of its Q1 plan. The company produced 719,000 ounces of gold, above its 640,000–680,000 ounce guidance range, helped by Nevada Gold Mines, Veladero, and the ramp-up at Loulo-Gounkoto .
That production beat mattered, but it should not be confused with a year-over-year surge in gold volumes. Barrick’s Q1 2025 gold production was 758,000 ounces, which was higher than the 719,000 ounces reported for Q1 2026 . In other words, the EPS surge was not primarily a story of producing far more gold than last year. It was a story of realizing much better economics on the quarter’s production.
Costs were the second major operating lever. Barrick said gold costs per ounce were better than plan, citing efficiencies in mining and processing . The reported Q1 2026 cost metrics were $1,922 per ounce for gold cost of sales, $1,327 per ounce for total cash costs, and $1,708 per ounce for all-in sustaining costs
.
That matters because the sustainability of Barrick’s earnings depends not just on the gold price, but on the spread between realized prices and the cost of producing each ounce. If realized gold prices stay high and costs remain controlled, Barrick can keep generating strong margins. If costs rise or gold prices fall, that earnings leverage can work in reverse.
Barrick can likely sustain strong profitability if the same three conditions remain in place: elevated realized gold prices, production close to plan, and disciplined costs. But sustaining a 256% year-over-year EPS growth rate is a much higher bar.
The company’s full-year 2026 production guidance is 2.90–3.25 million ounces of gold and 190,000–220,000 tonnes of copper . Q1’s 719,000 ounces of gold represents roughly 22%–25% of that full-year gold guidance range, while Q1 copper production of 49,000 tonnes represents roughly 22%–26% of the full-year copper range
. That is a solid start, but it does not by itself signal a major production breakout.
There is another reason to be cautious on volume-driven upside: Barrick’s 2026 gold guidance range is below its 2025 full-year gold production of 3.26 million ounces, even at the high end . That makes realized gold prices and cost execution especially important to the 2026 earnings outlook.
The bull case is straightforward. If Barrick continues to receive high realized gold prices, keeps costs close to or better than plan, and maintains stable production at key assets, Q1’s strong margins can carry into the rest of the year .
The risk case is just as clear. Because Barrick’s earnings strength was supported by a higher realized gold price, a pullback in gold would pressure margins . Because better-than-plan costs helped the quarter, cost slippage would reduce the benefit of strong pricing
. And because the production beat was tied to specific mine performance at Nevada Gold Mines, Veladero, and Loulo-Gounkoto, execution at those assets remains central to the 2026 outlook
.
Barrick’s Q1 2026 EPS surge was driven by a powerful mix: higher realized gold prices, a better-than-guided gold production quarter, and better-than-plan costs. The momentum is partly sustainable if those conditions persist, but the 256% EPS growth rate should be treated as an exceptional quarter, not a baseline for every quarter of 2026.