Evolution Mining share price slides 6% on gold pullback — what to watch before Monday’s ASX open
31 January 2026
1 min read

Evolution Mining share price slides 6% on gold pullback — what to watch before Monday’s ASX open

Sydney, Jan 31, 2026, 17:26 AEDT — Market closed

Evolution Mining shares fell 6.42% to close at A$14.71 on Friday, dragged down by a late-week dip in bullion prices and a wider sell-off in the mining sector. (Yahoo Finance)

The decline is significant as it precedes a hectic week for Australian markets, with earnings season kicking into gear and the Reserve Bank of Australia set to announce its policy decision. Marc Jocum, senior product and investment strategist at Global X ETFs, noted that “The earnings season will be central in determining whether recent gains are justified at the stock level.” (Indo Premier)

Evolution set a date for its next major update. The miner will release its half-year financial report and Appendix 4D — a required ASX results summary — before trading begins on Feb. 11. A 10:30 a.m. AEDT call will follow, featuring Lawrie Conway and Fran Summerhayes. The company reaffirmed full-year guidance of 710,000 to 780,000 ounces of gold and 70,000 to 80,000 tonnes of copper, with all-in sustaining costs targeting A$1,640 to A$1,760 per ounce — a standard industry measure that includes sustaining capital and site expenses. (YourIR)

Gold took a sharp tumble on Friday, dropping 4.7% to $5,143.40 an ounce after touching a record high earlier this week, Reuters reported. Profit-taking and a stronger dollar weighed on the metal following Donald Trump’s announcement that former Fed governor Kevin Warsh will head the central bank. Saxo Bank’s Ole Hansen described the decline as “ripe for a correction.” (Reuters)

On the ASX, it wasn’t only Evolution feeling the heat. Genesis Minerals slid 9.8%, while Newmont dropped 8% as gold stocks tumbled heading into the close, MarketIndex reported. (Market Index)

Evolution investors face a key test in the next session: will the gold price stabilize enough for the stock to hold its ground, or was Friday’s drop the beginning of a deeper pullback after gold’s strong rally?

Copper plays a different role. It can steady cash flow when gold wobbles, but it also drags shares into a second, often volatile market.

The risk is clear, though unsettling: if gold prices fall further while the Australian dollar strengthens, miners could see their margins in local currency shrink quickly. Attention would then move beyond “gold price beta” to concentrate on costs and production, with any sign that expenses are creeping above the company’s target range coming under intense scrutiny.

As trading restarts Monday, eyes will be on whether gold stocks hold steady alongside the metal and how rate forecasts shift ahead of the central bank meeting. The next significant company event is the half-year report and conference call on Feb. 11.

Stock Market Today

  • BSE, NSE to Open for Trading on February 1 Ahead of Union Budget 2026
    January 31, 2026, 1:43 AM EST. BSE and NSE will hold regular trading sessions on February 1, 2026, despite it falling on a Sunday, to coincide with the Union Budget presentation. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will present her ninth consecutive Budget at 11 a.m. The Ministry of Finance released the Economic Survey on January 29, setting the stage for the detailed Budget documents prepared by the Department of Economic Affairs. Markets have historically opened for Budget announcements even on weekends, with similar occurrences in 2025, 2020, and 2015. This session will run from 9:15 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., providing investors with a live window into proposed fiscal policies and financial plans for the new year.
Macquarie stock heads into next week with AirFinance sale in focus and RBA decision looming
Previous Story

Macquarie stock heads into next week with AirFinance sale in focus and RBA decision looming

Lynas Rare Earths share price sinks as U.S. steps back from critical-minerals price floors
Next Story

Lynas Rare Earths share price sinks as U.S. steps back from critical-minerals price floors

Go toTop