Today: 11 June 2026
Equinox Gold Corp Stock (EQX) in Focus After $1.015 Billion Brazil Mine Sale to CMOC: Latest News, Forecasts, and Key Levels to Watch (Dec. 15, 2025)

Equinox Gold Corp Stock (EQX) in Focus After $1.015 Billion Brazil Mine Sale to CMOC: Latest News, Forecasts, and Key Levels to Watch (Dec. 15, 2025)

Equinox Gold Corp stock is in the spotlight on Monday, December 15, 2025, after the Canadian miner announced a major portfolio shake-up: the sale of its Brazil operations to a subsidiary of China’s CMOC Group for total consideration of $1.015 billion. The transaction is reshaping Equinox’s geographic footprint, accelerating debt reduction plans, and reframing the investment debate around a simpler “North America–anchored” production story—right as gold prices remain historically elevated. Equinox Gold+2Reuters+2

Below is what happened, why it matters for EQX stock (TSX: EQX, NYSE American: EQX), what analysts and market trackers are forecasting as of Dec. 15, and the catalysts investors are watching into 2026.

What happened with Equinox Gold stock today

Equinox Gold said it has agreed to sell its 100% interest in the Aurizona Mine, RDM Mine, and the Bahia Complex in Brazil (collectively, the “Brazil Operations”) to a CMOC Group subsidiary for $1.015 billion. The consideration includes $900 million in upfront cash at closing plus a production-linked contingent cash payment of up to $115 million one year after closing. Equinox Gold

In early Monday trading, EQX was hovering around $14.70 (NYSE American listing), according to the latest available pricing snapshot.

Market commentary and deal headlines also pushed the stock into “movers” coverage, with some premarket indications pointing to an uptick following the announcement. Benzinga

The deal terms: $900M cash now, up to $115M later

Equinox’s announcement lays out a clean structure:

  • Upfront payment:$900 million cash due at closing (subject to customary adjustments).
  • Contingent payment:Up to $115 million cash, payable one year after closing and tied to production thresholds.
  • Timeline: Closing is expected in Q1 2026, subject to regulatory approvals and other customary conditions. Equinox also stated the deal is not subject to financing conditions.

Reuters’ deal write-up (from the CMOC side) adds that CMOC is buying entities described as Leagold LatAm Holdings B.V. and Luna Gold Corp, and that approvals include Brazil’s antitrust authority CADE and relevant Chinese regulatory authorities.

How the contingent payment works

Equinox’s press release states that the contingent amount depends on production during the first year after closing, including:

  • 12.5% of revenue for production between 200,000 and 280,000 ounces, or
  • $115 million if production is ≥ 280,000 ounces.

That structure matters for investors because it introduces a second “mini-catalyst” after closing: if the assets perform strongly under new ownership, Equinox could receive meaningful incremental cash in 2027.

Why Equinox is selling Brazil: the company’s “North America first” pivot

Equinox CEO Darren Hall framed the sale as a “pivotal step” toward becoming a North American focused gold producer, with the proceeds aimed directly at balance sheet repair and funding growth internally. Equinox Gold

Equinox said the sale proceeds are expected to fully repay:

  • a $500 million Term Loan, and
  • a $300 million Sprott Loan,

while also reducing its revolving credit facility—moves the company says should lower interest expense and improve per-share cash flow.

This is not happening in isolation. Equinox also noted that after completing its merger with Calibre Mining, it reviewed the expanded portfolio and received inbound interest before selecting this transaction as the best value-maximizing path.

What Equinox Gold will look like after the sale

One of the most investor-relevant parts of Equinox’s announcement is the “pro forma” snapshot: what production and assets remain once Brazil is gone.

Equinox said that after closing, its production platform will consist of:

  • Valentine and Greenstone mines in Canada,
  • Mesquite mine in California, and
  • El Limón and Libertad mines in Nicaragua.

Equinox also highlighted a pipeline of near-term organic growth initiatives including:

  • Valentine Expansion,
  • Castle Mountain Phase 2, and
  • a “redefined development plan” at Los Filos in Mexico, with formal 2026 production and cost guidance expected in early 2026. Equinox Gold

Production forecast: 700,000–800,000 ounces in 2026 (company expectation)

Assuming stable performance and the ramp-up of its Canadian cornerstone mines, Equinox said it anticipates annual 2026 production of 700,000 to 800,000 ounces of gold as Valentine and Greenstone reach nameplate capacity.

That’s a key “management forecast” investors are likely to anchor on—especially because it effectively argues the company can sell Brazil and still scale meaningfully.

Brazil sale vs. Brazil production: what’s being given up?

The obvious tradeoff is diversification and near-term ounces.

Industry coverage notes that the Brazilian operations being sold were expected (based on company guidance cited in reporting) to deliver roughly 250,000–270,000 ounces of production in 2025.

So investors are weighing a classic mining-company dilemma:

  • Option A: Keep producing cash-flowing Brazil ounces, but carry higher complexity, jurisdictional mix, and debt costs.
  • Option B: Monetize the assets at a big headline valuation, eliminate major debt, and concentrate on fewer, “tier-one” projects—while accepting ramp-up execution risk.

Equinox is explicitly choosing Option B.

The gold price backdrop: miners are swimming in a very strange pool

The timing is not random. Gold prices on Dec. 15 are still extremely high by historical standards. Reuters reported spot gold around $4,344/oz and U.S. gold futures around $4,377/oz on Monday, helped by a softer U.S. dollar and lower Treasury yields, with markets watching upcoming U.S. jobs data.

For gold miners like Equinox, a high bullion price environment can do two things at once:

  1. Boost operating margins (especially if costs don’t rise as fast as gold).
  2. Make asset sales more attractive, because buyers are often willing to pay for long-life ounces when gold is ripping.

That’s the macro canvas behind today’s company-specific story.

Recent financial and operating context: what Equinox reported before this deal

Equinox’s most recent quarterly update (Q3 2025, released Nov. 5) helps explain why management is leaning into a “ramp-up and deleveraging” narrative.

Among the Q3 highlights Equinox reported:

  • Record production: 236,382 ounces
  • All-in sustaining costs (AISC): $1,833 per oz
  • Average realized gold price: $3,397 per oz
  • Revenue: $819.0 million
  • Adjusted EPS: $0.19
  • Net debt: $1,278.2 million (as of Sept. 30, 2025)

That net debt number is especially relevant: the Brazil sale proceeds are being positioned as a decisive strike against leverage, rather than a “nice-to-have” liquidity boost.

Analyst forecasts and price targets as of Dec. 15, 2025: wide range, same core theme

If you’re looking for a single neat “consensus forecast” for EQX stock… you will not find one. What you will find is a generally positive rating trend paired with big dispersion in price targets, depending on the data source and methodology.

MarketBeat: average target $26 (high $35, low $17)

MarketBeat shows:

  • Consensus rating: Buy (based on 12 analyst ratings)
  • Consensus price target:$26.00, with a high of $35.00 and low of $17.00 (as displayed on its page updated Dec. 15).

TradingView (FactSet-sourced): 1-year target $16.45 (range $13.71–$19.60)

TradingView’s forecast page (citing FactSet as a data provider) shows:

  • Price target:$16.45
  • Range:$13.71 to $19.60
  • Analyst rating: “Strong buy,” based on 10 analysts providing ratings in the past three months (as displayed). TradingView

Why the targets differ so much

Two big reasons:

  1. Different datasets and refresh cycles. Some aggregators can carry older targets forward, while others emphasize recent ratings.
  2. Different assumptions about execution. The same company can look “cheap” or “fully valued” depending on what you assume for Greenstone and Valentine ramp-ups, costs, and capital allocation after debt repayment.

Fundamental “fair value” style analysis: Simply Wall St

Simply Wall St’s valuation write-up (from Nov. 27, after Valentine reached commercial production) framed EQX as 12.7% undervalued using a narrative fair value estimate of CA$21.75 versus a last closing price of CA$18.98 at the time, while also flagging execution risks tied to ramp-ups and sector uncertainty.

A separate (recent) bullish signal: reported broker target increases

MarketBeat also published an instant-alert style item noting that Royal Bank of Canada raised a price target (reported as C$25 from C$19), alongside discussion of broader positive rating sentiment. (This is secondary reporting, not the original bank note.)

What investors will watch next: the EQX catalyst checklist

Now that the “Brazil sale” headline is out, the next leg for Equinox Gold stock likely depends on execution and timelines—because mining is where spreadsheets go to get humbled by reality.

1) Regulatory approvals and deal closing (Q1 2026 target)

The sale requires regulatory clearances, including Brazil’s antitrust authority (CADE) and Chinese regulators, per Reuters. Any delays could extend the time Equinox carries its current debt structure.

2) Debt repayment and interest expense reduction (post-close)

Equinox’s plan to repay the $500M Term Loan and $300M Sprott Loan is explicitly tied to closing proceeds. If the deal closes on schedule, the balance-sheet “before vs. after” could be stark—and that’s exactly the kind of change that can re-rate a stock. Equinox Gold

3) Greenstone and Valentine ramp-ups (the operational heart of the bull case)

Equinox’s strategy leans heavily on these Canadian operations. In Q3 results, the company emphasized improving Greenstone performance and described Valentine commissioning progress, with the CEO stating he anticipated Valentine reaching nameplate capacity by Q2 2026 (as of that November update).

4) 2026 production and cost guidance (expected early 2026)

Equinox said formal 2026 guidance will be provided in early 2026. That guidance will likely be a defining moment, because it either validates (or challenges) the 700,000–800,000 oz annual production expectation under the post-sale portfolio.

5) Gold prices and rate expectations

Gold’s strength remains a supportive tailwind, but it’s also a volatility source. On Dec. 15, Reuters tied the day’s gold move to the dollar, yields, and macro data expectations—exactly the variables that can swing sentiment quickly.

Key risks for Equinox Gold stock investors to keep in mind

Even with a compelling headline number ($1.015 billion is not pocket change), EQX stock still carries very real risks:

  • Closing risk: approvals and conditions could delay or derail closing.
  • Execution risk: the “North America growth” thesis requires Greenstone and Valentine to ramp predictably while costs stay controlled. Equinox Gold+1
  • Concentration risk: selling Brazil simplifies the story but reduces geographic diversification—good for focus, potentially bad if one core asset underperforms.
  • Commodity-price risk: gold prices are supportive today, but they are not contractual guarantees.

Bottom line: EQX stock now trades on a simpler story—plus a harder test

As of December 15, 2025, the core story for Equinox Gold Corp stock is no longer “diversified Americas producer with meaningful Brazil exposure.” It’s becoming:

A debt-repaired, Canada-and-U.S.-anchored growth miner, with Nicaragua contributing, and a near-term focus on executing two major Canadian ramp-ups—funded by monetizing Brazil at a headline valuation of $1.015 billion.

Analyst trackers and valuation writers largely agree on the direction of travel (better balance sheet, clearer growth pathway), but they disagree—sometimes wildly—on the upside math. That’s typical when a company’s next chapter hinges on operational delivery, not just the press release.

Stock Market Today

  • LSEG Share Price Rises as Market Downgrades AI Disruption Risk
    June 11, 2026, 1:32 AM EDT. London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) shares have climbed 27% since February after investors and analysts reassessed the potential impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on its business. Initial worries about AI-driven pricing pressure and market share erosion in LSEG's data services triggered a nearly 13% one-day plunge. However, UBS recently removed LSEG from its list of companies vulnerable to AI disruption, signaling growing confidence. Analysts now rate LSEG as undervalued compared with peers such as Moody's and MSCI, with an average 35% upside over 12 months. CEO David Schwimmer's strategy and AI integration within its Workspace platform are gaining traction. Activist investor Elliott Management's significant stake has added pressure for value-boosting moves like expanding share buybacks or potential business spin-offs, supporting the stock's positive momentum.

Latest articles

Tech stocks slide after hours, Oracle’s AI spending draws focus

Tech stocks slide after hours, Oracle’s AI spending draws focus

11 June 2026
Semiconductor stocks plunged 3.6%, dragging the S&P 500 technology sector into correction territory—down 11% from its June 2 record—as investors punished AI-linked companies like Oracle and Super Micro Computer for heavy spending and capital raises, signaling a shift in risk appetite amid rising inflation and escalating U.S.-Iran tensions.
Murphy USA Shares Spike 10% After Casey’s Margin Surge Rattles Gas Station Sector

Murphy USA Shares Spike 10% After Casey’s Margin Surge Rattles Gas Station Sector

11 June 2026
Murphy USA soared 10.04% to $612.16 as investors seized on Casey’s General Stores’ stronger-than-expected fuel margins, spotlighting sector-wide pump profitability; with Murphy’s own first-quarter fuel contribution up 40.6% and margins at 35.0 cents per gallon, the stock’s jump reflects bets that high margins will persist, though volatility in fuel prices remains a key risk.
Sky Quarry Jumps in After-Hours; Traders Eye June Refinery Restart

Sky Quarry Jumps in After-Hours; Traders Eye June Refinery Restart

11 June 2026
Sky Quarry soared 22.44% to $1.91 on record volume, then jumped to $2.38 after hours, as investors bet on a June refinery restart after repairs and a feedstock shortage crushed Q1 revenue to $383; with just $66,828 in cash and “substantial doubt” about its ability to continue, the stock’s fate hinges on hitting its June production target.
Alibaba Stock (BABA) Today: Price, Latest News, Analyst Forecasts and 2026 Outlook as AI Spending Accelerates
Previous Story

Alibaba Stock (BABA) Today: Price, Latest News, Analyst Forecasts and 2026 Outlook as AI Spending Accelerates

Kenvue Stock (KVUE) Today: Latest News, Deal Outlook, Analyst Forecasts and Key Risks (Dec. 15, 2025)
Next Story

Kenvue Stock (KVUE) Today: Latest News, Deal Outlook, Analyst Forecasts and Key Risks (Dec. 15, 2025)

Go toTop