Newmont Corporation (NYSE: NEM) ended the holiday-shortened Christmas Eve session (Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2025) modestly lower and then stayed relatively calm in after-hours trading—an important “tell” as investors head into a thin-liquidity reopening on Friday, Dec. 26.
Below is what moved the backdrop today, what fresh analysis and forecasts are saying, and the specific price levels and catalysts to monitor before the next U.S. opening bell.
Where Newmont stock stands after the bell on Dec. 24, 2025
Newmont shares finished the abbreviated NYSE session near $104.76 at the early close (1:00 p.m. ET) and traded around $104.73 in late trading by 5:00 p.m. ET—a muted after-hours tape consistent with holiday conditions. [1]
For the session, Newmont traded in a roughly $103.20–$105.34 range, with volume of about 2.0 million shares—light for a mega-cap miner and even more so given the shortened day. [2]
The key context: this small dip comes after a powerful run in the sector. Zacks’ analysis published today notes Newmont is up about 179% over the past year (their comparison window). [3]
The big market story today: records in stocks and precious metals, but thin trading
Christmas Eve delivered a classic “quiet rally” vibe in U.S. equities: the S&P 500 and Dow closed at record highs on low volume as traders stepped away for the holiday. [4]
At the same time, the precious-metals complex stayed in the spotlight. Multiple outlets reported gold near/around $4,500 per ounce with record-level momentum cited across gold and silver. [5]
For gold miners like Newmont, that’s usually supportive—yet Newmont’s “after-the-bell” read was more about consolidation than celebration.
Two reasons this matters for Friday’s open:
- Holiday liquidity can distort signals. With fewer participants, prices can drift or snap on relatively small orders—especially in miners that trade as a leveraged expression of gold sentiment. (Reuters highlighted year-end liquidity conditions alongside the metals surge.)
- Newmont is already priced for a lot of good news. With shares near recent highs and up sharply over the past year, even strong macro tailwinds can be met with profit-taking or “wait for confirmation” behavior.
Today’s Newmont-specific headlines investors are digesting
While there was no major after-hours corporate surprise from Newmont on Dec. 24, investors did see fresh ownership/positioning headlines and renewed focus on Newmont’s 2025 cash-flow story.
1) Institutional positioning updates (filed/covered today)
MarketBeat ran multiple Dec. 24 items focused on institutional holdings changes, including:
- Vontobel Holding Ltd. increasing its stake (as characterized in the report), with MarketBeat also citing institutional ownership around 68.85%. [6]
- Yousif Capital Management LLC trimming its position, also referencing recent insider sales totals and the stock’s proximity to its 52-week high. [7]
These aren’t “price-moving” by themselves, but on a low-volume week they can influence sentiment—especially as investors look for signals about whether big holders are still adding after a large run.
2) The cash-flow and balance-sheet narrative remains central
Newmont’s most recent quarterly update (Oct. 23, 2025) emphasized:
- Record free cash flow of $1.6B and $2.3B cash from operating activities (with working-capital timing noted). [8]
- Roughly $640M in net cash proceeds from asset/equity sales in the quarter, and more than $3.5B in 2025 net cash proceeds from announced transactions overall. [9]
- Debt reduced by $2B via a tender offer, ending the quarter in a near-zero net debt position, with $5.6B cash and $9.6B total liquidity cited. [10]
- A stated $0.25 quarterly dividend, payable Dec. 22 to holders of record Nov. 26. [11]
That mix—high gold prices plus visible capital returns (dividend + buybacks) plus a cleaner balance sheet—is a major reason Newmont has been treated as a “quality large-cap proxy” for the gold cycle.
3) Portfolio optimization and “non-core” monetization is still in the news flow
Zacks also pointed today to Newmont’s continued portfolio actions, including a recently disclosed agreement to sell 6,773,641 shares of Fuerte Metals at C$4.35 (about C$29.5M gross proceeds) and reducing ownership from roughly 24% to ~19.5% post-transaction (subject to closing). [12]
This is small in dollar terms for Newmont, but it reinforces the broader message: the company is still actively pruning and recycling capital.
Forecasts and analyst outlook: earnings momentum is the headline, targets are lagging (and scattered)
Earnings expectations are rising
A Zacks analysis published today (via Nasdaq) highlighted upward-trending estimates:
- 2025 EPS estimate:$6.06
- 2026 EPS estimate:$7.07
…and noted both have been trending higher in the last ~60 days. [13]
In plain English: Wall Street’s model is still catching up to the cash-generation potential of this gold-price regime.
Price targets are all over the map, partly because the stock moved faster than coverage
Across tracking services and recap reports, you’ll see wide dispersion in targets:
- Some “recent target” examples cited in coverage include UBS at $125 (Dec. 1, 2025) and Scotiabank at $114 (Oct. 23, 2025). [14]
- Other compilations still show a lower consensus that appears to incorporate older calls—an issue that becomes obvious when a stock reprices rapidly in a commodities upcycle. [15]
The practical takeaway before Dec. 26: don’t treat a single “consensus target” as gospel right now. In fast-moving cycles, targets can lag, and the spread between low and high targets often says more about uncertainty than about “true value.”
The calendar: when markets reopen, and what data could matter on Dec. 26
Trading hours and holiday schedule
- U.S. exchanges closed early at 1:00 p.m. ET on Dec. 24 and remain closed on Dec. 25 for Christmas. [16]
- Markets are scheduled to resume a full session on Friday, Dec. 26—despite the federal office-closure directive that made headlines this week (it does not change exchange schedules). [17]
Economic calendar (Friday looks quiet)
MarketWatch’s U.S. economic calendar shows no major U.S. releases scheduled for Friday, Dec. 26. [18]
That tends to push price discovery toward:
- Gold and the U.S. dollar
- Rates/yields
- Any breaking geopolitical headline risk
- Idiosyncratic company news (M&A, operations updates, guidance commentary)
What to watch before the opening bell on Friday, Dec. 26
Here are the “most actionable” items for Newmont watchers heading into the reopen:
1) Gold’s follow-through (or reversal) after record headlines
Today’s macro narrative was bullish for gold, but late-year trading can exaggerate moves. If gold holds near its highs into Asia/Europe and back into the U.S. premarket, miners often catch a bid. If gold fades, miners can “air pocket” quickly—especially after a major run. [19]
What to look for: not just gold’s direction, but how Newmont behaves relative to gold—outperformance can signal fresh institutional appetite; underperformance can signal profit-taking and rotation.
2) Liquidity and “holiday tape” risk
AP reported NYSE volume was dramatically lighter than normal on Dec. 24, a hallmark of holiday conditions. [20]
Expect Friday to still feel like a low-liquidity session—which can mean sharper-than-expected swings in miners, even without major news.
3) Options and positioning effects into a Friday session
Even without a marquee macro print, Friday can see “positioning-driven” action (weekly options, hedging adjustments, and year-end portfolio window dressing). If Newmont trades near obvious round-number strikes (e.g., ~$105), the stock can behave “sticky” or whip around those levels.
4) Near-term corporate catalysts investors will start front-running
Two items loom large as the calendar flips:
- Leadership transition: Reuters reported Newmont CEO Tom Palmer is set to step down on Dec. 31, with Natascha Viljoen slated to become CEO on Jan. 1, 2026. Leadership transitions can create short-term uncertainty (and opportunity), especially if investors expect portfolio strategy or capital allocation to evolve. [21]
- Next earnings window: Multiple calendars point to Feb. 19, 2026 as the next earnings date (company-estimated/expected). [22]
Friday’s session is early positioning for those events, not reaction to them—but as liquidity returns after Christmas, the market often starts repricing the “next story.”
Key price levels to know going into Dec. 26
Based on this week’s tape:
- Immediate resistance zone: roughly $105.34–$105.73 (Wednesday’s high and the nearby recent high referenced in coverage). [23]
- Near-term support zone: roughly $103.20 (Wednesday’s low), with the potential for buyers to defend that area if gold remains strong. [24]
In holiday conditions, these “simple” levels can matter more than usual because fewer participants are around to smooth price action.
Bottom line for Newmont stock heading into the Dec. 26 open
Newmont’s after-hours calm on Dec. 24 looks less like a warning sign and more like a holiday pause after a massive 2025 run—especially with gold printing record-type headlines and U.S. equities in a year-end rally. [25]
The setup into Friday is straightforward:
- If gold holds strong, Newmont has a credible fundamental story to reassert itself (record free cash flow, capital returns, improved balance sheet, ongoing portfolio optimization). [26]
- If gold cools off or liquidity-driven volatility spikes, Newmont could see a choppy reopen—particularly with the stock already near highs and analyst targets still recalibrating. [27]
Disclosure: This article is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.
References
1. stockanalysis.com, 2. stockanalysis.com, 3. www.nasdaq.com, 4. apnews.com, 5. www.nasdaq.com, 6. www.marketbeat.com, 7. www.marketbeat.com, 8. www.newmont.com, 9. www.newmont.com, 10. www.newmont.com, 11. www.newmont.com, 12. www.nasdaq.com, 13. www.nasdaq.com, 14. www.benzinga.com, 15. www.marketbeat.com, 16. www.nyse.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.marketwatch.com, 19. www.nasdaq.com, 20. apnews.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.zacks.com, 23. stockanalysis.com, 24. stockanalysis.com, 25. www.marketwatch.com, 26. www.newmont.com, 27. www.marketbeat.com


