Gold Is Above $4,500 and These 4 Miners Under $45 Are Still Dirt Cheap

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Gold Is Above $4,500 and These 4 Miners Under $45 Are Still Dirt Cheap

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Sovereign debt loads keep climbing, the dollar index is wobbling, and central banks are still net buyers of bullion. That backdrop has pushed realized gold prices into uncharted territory, with major producers booking $3,500 to nearly $4,900 per ounce on Q1 sales. For retail investors scanning for hard-asset exposure without paying $200-plus for a megacap, a handful of producers still trade for less than the price of a tank of premium fuel.

With that in mind, here are four gold and copper miners trading under $45 that screen as bargains against the macro backdrop. (Note: ENI was excluded from this list because it is an integrated oil and gas major rather than a materials producer, and its ADR trades above the $45 ceiling.)

Barrick Mining (NYSE: B)

Barrick Mining (NYSE:B) is a global gold and copper producer with operations in 17 countries and tier-one assets including Nevada Gold Mines, Pueblo Viejo, and the Reko Diq copper-gold project in Pakistan. Shares at $41.28 sit comfortably below the $45 ceiling despite a 124.51% one-year gain, leaving room against the $58.17 analyst target.

The fundamentals back the macro thesis. FY25 revenue jumped 31% to $16.96 billion, EPS came in at $2.93 (+140% YoY), and free cash flow hit $3.87 billion. Management responded with a 140% jump in the quarterly dividend to $0.42, a new 50% payout policy on attributable free cash, and $1.5 billion in buybacks retiring roughly 3% of shares. As the agile base-plus-performance dividend model compounds, the copper pivot via Reko Diq and Lumwana adds a second growth lever. CEO Mark Hill called Q4 “record quarterly cash flow… highest shareholder returns in this company’s history.”

The risk: 2026 gold guidance of 2.90 to 3.25 million ounces sits below 2025 actuals, and Mali remains a geopolitical wildcard. At 11x trailing earnings, the bargain is intact.

Kinross Gold (NYSE: KGC)

Kinross Gold (NYSE:KGC | KGC Price Prediction) operates in the US, Brazil, Mauritania, and Chile, with a $34.18 billion market cap. Shares at $28.68 sit well under the ceiling after a 97.37% one-year run.

Q1 26 revenue grew 60.8% to $2.41 billion on a $4,873/oz realized gold price, and free cash flow of $837.5 million marked the fourth consecutive record quarter. Buybacks since April 2025 have reduced the count by roughly 3%. At 9x forward earnings, against an analyst target of $41.23, the discount is real. Risk: planned production decline to 2.0 million Au eq oz in 2026 and Mauritanian tax friction.

Harmony Gold Mining (NYSE: HMY)

Harmony Gold Mining (NYSE:HMY) is a South African producer pivoting into copper via the $1.00 billion MAC Copper acquisition closed October 2025. At $17.19, the stock trades at 11x earnings, with nine-month gold and copper revenue up 34% to $4.02 billion and a net cash swing of $78 million from net debt of $335 million.

CEO Beyers Nel pointed to an “11th consecutive year of meeting production guidance” and a pathway to roughly 100,000 tonnes of copper per annum. Risks include rand exposure, Eskom reliability, and lower-grade years at Moab Khotsong.

Eldorado Gold (NYSE: EGO)

Eldorado Gold (NYSE:EGO) operates in Turkey, Canada, and Greece, with the $1.315 billion Skouries copper-gold project ~94% complete and first concentrate targeted Q3 2026. Q1 26 revenue rose 49.9% to $532.4 million, beating estimates by 4.5%, and adjusted EPS of $0.95 beat by 44.18%.

At $31.69, the stock trades at 7x forward earnings against a $45 analyst target. Skouries capex creep and a Q3 CEO transition are the live risks worth tracking.

Bottom Line

Each of these names carries jurisdictional, operational, and commodity-cycle risk that can override a favorable macro setup. Investors should weigh production guidance, AISC trajectories, and capital-return policies against their own time horizon before treating sub-$45 gold equities as a free option on sovereign debt anxiety.

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About the Author Alex Sirois →

Alex Sirois is a financial writer with experience spanning both retail and institutional investing. He has written for InvestorPlace and held roles at BNY Mellon and Bernstein, giving him a perspective that bridges Main Street portfolios and Wall Street analysis.

Alex holds an MBA from George Washington University and has built his career across multiple industries, including e-commerce, education, and translation — a breadth of experience that informs how he breaks down complex financial topics for everyday investors. His writing is conversational, actionable, and grounded in long-term, buy-and-hold investing principles.

At 247 Wall St., Alex focuses on delivering analysis that is both accessible and useful, with a clear emphasis on helping readers make more informed decisions with their money.

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