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Investor Event Transcript

Royal Gold Inc (RGLD)

Investor Event Transcript 2026-03-31 For: 2026-03-31
Added on July 07, 2026

Capital Markets Day Transcript - RGLD 2026-03-31

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

Well, good afternoon, everybody. Thank you very much for joining us today. Welcome to Royal Gold's 2026 Investor Day. My name is Alistair Baker. I'm Senior Vice President of Invest Relations and Business Development at Royal Gold. So to start off, I'll just make a few brief statements. We will be making forward-looking statements during the course of today's activity, including statements about our projections and expectations for the future. All of these statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from these statements. These risks and uncertainties are all discussed with our filings with the SEC. We will also refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are available in the appendix to today's presentation. And on a final note, if there is a need for evacuation today during today's session, there is an emergency exit outside these two doors, double doors on the outside of the hallway. And the restrooms are also located down this corridor here. So over the past 40 years, Royal Gold has consistently delivered on its commitments, whether they be operational, strategic or financial. And today we want to show you not only how we've built that record, but how it sets the foundation for the next stage of our growth. There are three themes to today's presentation. The first is the execution of a consistent strategy. The second is the benefits of holding a large and well-diversified portfolio. And then thirdly, growth, where we see growth embedded within the portfolio and also how we think about growth when we look at things outside of the company. And this morning we also published two things that will help provide supporting detail to all of this that we present today. We issued a press release with our guidance and we also published our updated asset handbook which is available on our website. This asset handbook describes all of the assets where we have interests. We believe there's a meaningful disconnect between the intrinsic value of our business and how it's currently reflected in the market. We want to show you today why we think that gap should close by explaining some of the drivers of our performance and the path forward. You will hear from most of our senior Management today. Bill Heisenbutton is our president and CEO. He will give an overview of Royal Gold and our strategic position. Jason Hines is SVP of Strategy and Business Development. He will talk about the acquisitions we did in 2025 and their impact on the company. Martin Raffield is our SVP of Operations. He will talk about guidance and the highlights of the portfolio that underpin that guidance. Paul Libner is our CFO. He will talk about our approach to capital allocation, our strategy, and our framework. Dan Breeze is SVP of corporate development. He will talk about transactions, the transaction environment, and our approach to acquisitions. I'll come back up for a few minutes and talk about some of the unique attributes of Royal Gold as an equity investment, and then Bill will close things out with some closing comments before we enter the Q&A session. When we start with the Q&A session, we'll have other members of the management team join. We have Randy Sheffman, who's our SVP and General Counsel, and Alison Forrest, who's VP of Investment Stewardship, here with us today. So please ask any questions that may touch on their areas of expertise. We also have two other members of the IR team here. We have Kim Bergen and Kevin Chu, and we'd be happy to answer any questions that anybody has about any aspect of our business. We want to be open and transparent during today's session. So we expect formal remarks will run for just over two hours. We'll do a 10 minute break right after Martin's section so there is a little bit of an opportunity to stretch your legs. And then at about 3.40, 3.45 we're going to go downstairs and we'll ring the closing bell for the Nasdaq. June will be our 45th anniversary of trading on the Nasdaq. We're one of the longest tenured companies on the exchange so please join us to celebrate this milestone after that we will come back up here and we'll have a cocktail reception and that will run till 5 30 or 6 so with that I will turn it over to Bill to start the session thanks very

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

much Alistair good afternoon everyone welcome to Royal Gold's investor day I certainly appreciate your interest in our company I hope you do find the day to be informative and interesting as we give you an update on our business. So today, as Alistair just said, we have 10 members of the Royal Gold team present, which means you have a little more than 25% of our entire company in this room. While Alistair has introduced you to those present, I would like to take the time to extend a special thanks to Alistair, Kevin, and Kim for the work necessary to pull this day together, and really the extraordinary work necessary to complete the asset handbook, which is now available on our website. I know these thanks are extended to our full team, but I wanted to recognize their leadership in this process. So much of today is about telling you what is new at Royal Gold, and I'm going to start with what hasn't changed, and that is our strategy. And I think if you've heard it once, you've heard it time and again. We are focused on providing exposure to precious metals, gold in particular, through passive investing in mining properties that produce those metals. The exposure we provide provides investors is not the rigid one ounce will always be one ounce characteristic of physical gold, nor do we provide exposure to the metal that is accompanied by the capital and the operating costs of a mining company. We like to think of ourselves as an investment through all cycles. We acknowledge that the recent gold bull market that existed until a few weeks ago really brought greater interest in the operating companies. But our exposure to our company provides both upside prices but also, we think, a shelter when the gold price turns, as we have seen in the last few weeks. So our goals are simple, and I think as is our execution strategy, and it all starts with finding quality assets. about Cortez, Pueblo Viejo, Consanchi, and Antimena, those are just a few examples of the world-class assets that are operated by world-class operating companies. And I would say don't be surprised if Mount Milligan ends up with a mine life that extends beyond all of them. We seek to acquire these quality assets with as little dilution to shareholders as possible. While we did issue equity to close the Sandstorm acquisition last year, Those were the first shares that this company has issued since 2012. We believe our high margin, high cash flow generating business is ideally suited to debt finance and we use it quite a bit to finance growth when we cannot cover those acquisitions from operating cash flow. So we're quick to use debt and we try to be quick about repaying debt and we usually find the timing of the investments in this sector are far enough apart that we can usually draw down and then repay debt in a period of time that allows us to rebuild the liquidity and be ready for that next quality investment. And finally we spent you know the better part of two plus decades focused on increasing returns to shareholders. No other precious metal company has our 25-year history of annual increases to dividends. No other precious metal company is in the S&P high-yield dividend aristocrats index. That's an index we became a member when when we passed 20 years of increasing dividends. So our board is long in experience, if not in numbers. It's a relatively small group. Everyone on our board has operating company experience, I guess except for me. And the experience really covers all of the critical operating areas of our business, and whether that's business development, engineering, legal, and accounting, and finance. And I think our board achieves a delicate balance are both supporting management while challenging management, and I like to say that I'm in a better position to do my job with their assistance. Our management team brings the same balance of expertise in key areas. I often point out that since Royal Gold became focused on precious metals in the 1980s, I'm only the third CEO in that 40 plus year time period. Our management team probably averages about 10 plus years the company and and we all come from a variety of backgrounds whether that's operating companies investment banks commercial banks accounting firms law firms private equity so and i would like to say it's not only one of the most professional groups i've been associated with i have to say it's just it's an absolute pleasure to work with these folks so when i started to focus my career in the mining industry it only took 380 dollars an ounce 380 dollars to buy an ounce of gold and it now costs over $4,500 an ounce, and people always refer to the strength of the dollar because they compare it to other fiat currencies, but as you can see here, gold actually is the preeminent currency in the world. If you look at a U.S. dollar bill at the very top, it says Federal Reserve Note, which is a debt, and gold is nobody's debt. So I've been surprised that gold has sold off since the start of the Iran war, and people seem to have flocked to the currency of the country that actually initiated the event. I think the underpinnings of gold strength remain intact. I think central banks are largely still buying gold. China has now bought gold for 16 straight months. The U.S. external debt is continuing to increase in an unsustainable manner, and it's increasing on an expedited manner, given the war spending. I always say don't get me started on gold sales at Costco. You still have to be a member to buy it. Sometimes it's not in inventory, and there's still a limit as to how much you can buy at any one time. So I remain positive about the metal. I'm actually pleased to see that the investing market has turned its attention to gold and its role in a portfolio. The amount of generalist investor interest that we have seen in our stock has increased significantly in the last year. And if we can just turn a small percentage of investable dollars into gold, we could really have the foundation for a long-term strength in the metal. So if you look at the return on gold relative to other investments, it might actually be surprising that over the last 20 years, gold has achieved the same or a higher return than any other asset class. And just think of what we've been through in the last 20 years. global financial crisis, long-running conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, Gaza, Ukraine, Iran, COVID. In just the last 10 years, the doubling of the U.S. national debt and the first fiscal year where the U.S. spent more money on interest than they did on military spending. So in the investing world, gold has weathered the tech stock phenomenon, the rise of inflation, cannabis investing, meme stocks, Bitcoin, stable coins. but gold continues to endure thanks in part i think there's a counter cyclical demand force for the for the metal and as an example jewelry demand in india is down because the prices are higher but coin and bar investing in india are actually higher for the exact same reason and i would just say gold tends to respond well to uncertainty and i think if there's one word that i believe will continue to define the world in the short term and that is uncertainty So our business model offers what I refer to as, across the board, exposure to gold. Yes, look, physical gold is the safest way to invest in gold because it's already been mined, it's already been refined, it's in saleable form. But as I referred to earlier, that one ounce is always going to be one ounce, and there's no return on that investment-like interest income. Our model, where you take a 10-year, 5-million-ounce mine, it may eventually become a 20-year, 12-million-ounce mine. provides a leverage you're just not going to be able to find in an ETF or a physical bar. So we offer reserve and resource upside from drilling, but perhaps there's a less understood source of leverage to our business. And if companies adopt higher revenue and resource calculations, previously uneconomic material suddenly becomes or we benefit from that upside. And our business pays a dividend, so there is a return on the investment. Our model, I think, offers excellent diversification. If you look at Newmont, largest gold company in the world, they cite 12 mines that they manage. We have 80 producing assets. And I really hope one of the things you leave here today is really the sense of diversification in our portfolio. We think it's unsurpassed in the sector, like Solobo, North Parks, Malardic, great assets. But there is concentration risk in those portfolios. And I don't think anybody needs to be reminded about Cobre Panama and its impact on Franco a few years ago. So completing the board, our exposure to portfolio assets does not come with the operating or capital cost exposure unless we contractually decide to invest that money. And I imagine operating companies today, what are they worried about? They're worried about supply lines. They're worried about the cost of diesel. They're worried about the impact of tariffs. And our only concern really is if a project is shut down by these factors or its development is significantly delayed as a result of these factors. We don't have the human and the monetary costs associated with actively managing these challenges. And that discussion brings me to a review of our high-margin business. The operating cash and adjusted EBITDA margins here I actually think are a little bit understated because our largest cost is the cost of sales. And these costs are contractually defined based on the metal delivered to us. These aren't costs that can be managed by finding a new supplier or substituting new raw material inputs into our product. I would say the more impressive figure is to say that adjusted EBITDAs are on 95% of net revenue. You know, our cash G&A is only 4% of revenue. It's primarily composed of people costs, professional fees like accounting and legal, and the cost of maintaining our four offices. Look, we're exposed to higher cost of living adjustments and professional fee increases, but these are pretty nominal relative to the scale of the business. This is probably my favorite slide in the deck. You consider that 39 people manage a company with 360 properties, a billion dollars in revenue, and a $20 billion market capitalization. I think it says a lot about the people, and it says a lot about the business model. We always like to put the tech darlings up here. notwithstanding their size, their market influence, and their publicity, we're a far more efficient business on a per-employee basis. So we have the highest percentage of gold in our revenue base than any other company in our sector, and that consistent focus has allowed us to show really strong results over the last decade. So we always have new commodity fads. We get asked about investing in things like rare earths and lithium, lithium and I think about seven years ago we had an institutional investor ask why we didn't have Bitcoin on the balance sheet but we try to stick to what we know we know the gold market we know the precious metal space we have to know the base metals to the extent the underlying minds are producing the byproduct metals to form the basis for our revenue so I don't categorically rule out other commodities it's just not part of the core strategic focus of the business and we have to be able to understand the markets. So as you can see by the stat on the right, we have a higher beta to the gold price and actually a muted yet positive correlation to the market as a whole. And as we said, we're an investment for all cycles as opposed to investment for a certain part of a cycle or a counter cyclical play. I mentioned our dividend history a bit earlier, but we always like to highlight our record. We don't target a payout ratio. We don't targeted yield we just try to increase the dividend rate every year and and somebody may look at the payout ratios and think well it's a scope for higher payments to the higher dividends to the shareholders and we just we like to caution that when we look at one individual year's increase we also look to see if we can maintain that record over a longer period of time so and to us that that's the evidence of long-term sustainability of of the business one One year's payout increase is done with an eye towards the potential to continue that in the future. And I would say even in our large investment years of 2015 and 2025, a higher dividend rate was approved by the board. My final introductory comment surrounds accretive growth. The fact that we have already returned 20% of issued equity capital over the past few decades I think is even more impressive to me when you consider it includes the equity issued for the Stanstorm transaction. You remove that piece from the equation, and that 20% is actually closer to 50%. I think the created value comes from a number of different sources. Number one, our discipline surrounding equity issuance, of course, metal prices, accretive asset acquisitions, and probably the most important, and that's the hiring and retention of really talented people. So again, I do hope you find today to be an informative session. I will now turn the podium over to Jason Hines to discuss our recent acquisition activity.

Jason Hines, Analyst — Other

Thank you very much, Bill. My focus is on strategy and business development, and I'm pleased to have the opportunity to review Royal Gold's transformative 2025 and how it's positioned us for success now and in the years to come. And I believe transformative is the right term to use, as 2025 was a lot more than just a busy year for the company. The actions we've taken have built a foundation for continued growth, and our timing could not have been any better, as we closed several acquisitions into a strengthening commodity price environment. We concluded over $5 billion worth of transactions, a significant number in its own right, and even more so in the context of our mid-2025 market cap of around $12 billion. Together, these acquisitions gave us greater scale, longer duration, and improved our growth outlook, and leave us with market-leading diversification in all categories, production, development, and exploration. The plan of arrangement through which we acquired Sands Norman Horizon not only resulted in significant increase in precious metals production and cash flow, but more importantly, layered in a pipeline of high-quality, long-life development assets. Many of these, which are key drivers of our future growth, have demonstrated positive progress sooner than we originally forecast. This corporate M&A was complemented by two significant asset transactions. The acquisition of a billion-dollar gold stream on First Quantum's flagship Consanchi mine in Zambia, which is now one of our principal assets, and a gold stream and royalty transaction on the long-life Morinza Development Project in Ecuador, owned by Solaris Resources. We established certain near-term goals around these transactions, including streamlining the portfolio and debt reduction, while remaining committed to our capital return strategy. The Sandstorm transaction was initially underappreciated by the market, owing to a lack of institutional familiarity, and there was a certain level of complexity surrounding the cross-shareholding and cross-asset ownership between them and Horizon. There were also several equity and debt positions that are not core to the Royal Gold strategy. We have taken significant steps to simplify our holdings and we spent a lot of time on the road meeting with our shareholders to highlight the new assets, some of which are world-class in nature. We are appreciative of the support of the sell-side research community in helping us get the word out. In just a few months since closing we accomplished a lot in streamlining the portfolio to focus on our core business the steps we've taken to date include collapsing the horizon structure which brought back together the antimina royalty and the hod madden interests eliminating the more complex structures that are not necessary in a business of our size and we've also divested over 200 million dollars in mostly illiquid equity positions we were also able to restructure various investments in bear creek mining by leveraging our relationship with the Augusta Group to support Highlander Silver's acquisition of the company. As a result, we were able to convert debt and non-performing stream investments into additional royalties over Karani, one of the largest undeveloped, fully permitted silver assets in the world. We're pleased to expand our relationship with the Augusta Group that also includes Solaris Resources, and we look forward to what they have in store for both Karani and Wawrinsa. I won't steal Paul's thunder on the balance sheet, but non-core equity sales, portfolio performance, and strong commodity prices have allowed us to repay debt taken on in these transactions faster than originally anticipated. And we continue to be committed to shareholder returns via a growing sustainable dividend strategy, as we have for the past quarter century. Success in the mining sector requires patience with material progress at any given asset requiring a range of factors to align, along with a supportive market backdrop. While recent developments at some of our new assets informed our acquisition strategy and were anticipated, we've been pleasantly surprised by the pace of announcements from our partners. Ivanhoe achieved first concentrate production at the Platte Reef Mine, while remaining focused on a multi-phase expansion plan. At Mara, where we have a 20% gold stream option, Glencore has now put a timeline on their development plans and has applied for Rigi, which is the Argentinian incentive regime for large investments. There's growing confidence among the major base metal producers that Argentina will be an attractive jurisdiction for multi-billion dollar, multi-generation copper investments. Over in Zambia, First Quantum achieved commercial production at S3, the third sulfide processing train at Consanchi, where our gold stream is tied to copper production. While company-specific circumstances have SSR evaluating their future in Turkey, The updated feasibility study they produced for Haad Madden continues to demonstrate the world-class nature of this deposit, where we now hold royalty and equity interests. And just to cherry-pick something on the smaller end, Lundin Gold continues to grow gold production while demonstrating the porphyry potential on its vast land package at Fruta del Norte, where we hold a precious metals royalty. These are just select developments from our 2025 acquisitions. While there's also been meaningful news from our established portfolio. For example, Barrick's four-mile deposit is now, without a doubt, a world-class discovery, with updated resources and initial economics demonstrating its Tier 1 potential. As a reminder, we acquired a 1.6% gross royalty over four-mile as part of our late 2022 district-wide Cortez Complex add-ons, and this deposit alone could validate the entire cost. At Mount Milligan, our concentration is now reduced, although the mine still remains our largest asset by NAV and revenue. Sentara has extended the reserve life to 2045, but is exploring and permitting tailings facilities for well beyond that. Our largest asset is once again demonstrating multi-decade potential. The last development I'll touch on here is at Comacao. Since MMG acquired the asset in 2024, they have been pushing ahead with their expansion plans. Now the feasibility is complete, the project has been approved, and construction is underway. This is our biggest source of silver production and it now has line of sight to a 35% increase over our pre-expansion expectations. All this against a backdrop of surging prices for the white metal. While positive commodity tailwinds have played a role in accelerating the growth potential of our portfolio, capturing that benefit requires us to be invested in the right assets. Martin Raffield, our head of operations, will talk about these assets in more in greater detail during the next section of this presentation. So last year's activities have materially changed the company, and our transactions report card, so to speak, reflects this, showing improvement to our portfolio across several areas. With 39 additional producing assets, we've nearly doubled our total. We've added 11 development assets, many of which are flagship growth opportunities. And I haven't even mentioned the exploration and evaluation stage assets yet. This is now all featured in a single portfolio managed by a strengthened team. We look forward to demonstrating its revenue and cash flow generation potential in 2026 and for years to come, which will allow us to continue to pursue large, high-quality growth opportunities. Our now much larger portfolio increases our embedded growth and provides diversification benefits. Whether it comes from extensions or expansions of producing mines, or from projects moving through the exploration development cycle, Organic growth potential is the optionality that investors look for in high-quality royalty companies. We now have over 250 expiration and evaluation stage assets. These are proverbial irons in the fire that create value over time, with very little of our shareholders' capital at risk. Our royalties over B2 Gold's Back River District in northern Canada are a perfect example of optionality that takes time to become tangible value. We inherited our first interest here as part of a portfolio acquisition in 2008, ascribing almost no value to the 2% royalty over what was at the time an early-stage exploration project with a seemingly insurmountable lack of infrastructure. While we added to this position with a $50 million transaction in 2024, our net asset value here can now be measured in the hundreds of millions of dollars. We were pleased to see B2 achieve commercial production at Goose late last year and they continue to put out quality exploration results throughout the district. Having such a large portfolio means that we are not dependent on the success of one or two assets to support future organic growth and any setback even at a principal producing asset is not highly consequential. Optionality and diversification are key traits that drive premium valuations and our portfolio contains them in spades. Our portfolio is global, but most of our interests are in jurisdictions where mining is long established and a welcome and important part of the local economy. The life cycle of a mine is long and political winds will change, but this gives us confidence that our portfolio will be largely insulated from any negative long-term effects due to deterioration in a single jurisdiction. We monitor the global landscape in real time in order to identify changes of tone in jurisdictions, and we evaluate new ones on a case-by-case basis as investment opportunities arise. Dan will speak to this more when describing our business development process. We believe that the best place to find a mine is next to a mine. We have clusters of investments in established mining areas, whether mining camps with smaller geographic footprints or wider regions with geology that is favorable for porphyries, for example. along with favorable geology supportive regulatory environments and skilled workforces developed over multiple generations mean that these regions retain an advantage in advancing projects zooming into nevada the cortex complex and the battle mountain eureka trend is a prime example from first production at the cortez open pits in the late 60s through the pipeline discovery in the 90s, followed by Crossroads, Gold Rush, and now Four Mile. This is why we closely evaluate opportunities to grow our exposure in regions where our institutional knowledge may give us a competitive advantage. And higher commodity price environments also enhance our exposure, as deposits that were once thought mined out at lower prices are given a new lease on life. Operators prefer to spend exploration dollars near existing infrastructure in order to leverage off of previous permitting efforts and capital investments. As Bill mentioned, by design, gold has always been dominant in our portfolio, and recent transactions further strengthened our precious metals exposure. While gold is the material driver of both our net asset value and our revenue, we have silver and copper exposure from high-quality assets at all stages, from production down through to expiration. Geographically, the Americas represent about 70% of our NAV, with most of that in North America. Select African countries, namely Zambia, Botswana and Ghana, are also important contributors and all these jurisdictions have well-established mining industries. As a side note, we do have several revenue-generating properties in the Australia Pacific region. However, they contribute lower NAV given first their smaller size and second the tendency for Australian operators to publish short lives for their underground mines. but they have a history of continuous extension, and so they generate revenue for us on a long-term basis. Reducing our portfolio concentration risk has been a mission for our team for years, and we can now boast industry-leading diversification, as you can see in these charts. Our success depends on our operating partner's skills in exploration, mine development, and operation, and our counterparties are some of the largest and most well-capitalized companies in the mining sector. We often identify and invest in opportunities before they are on the radar of larger companies, but over time, high-quality assets tend to migrate into the hands of more established companies. To name a few, MMG acquired Comacao from a private equity group after we financed the mine's construction. And returning to the Back River example, this district passed from Dundee Precious in the early 2000s to Sabina in the 2010s before it was finally acquired, built, and commissioned. by B2 Gold. And just very recently, Zijin Mining, one of the world's largest gold producers, announced that it had acquired operating control over Wassa in Ghana, while Hudbay announced the acquisition of Arizona Sonoran, over whose cactus copper project we acquired a small royalty in late 2024. And sometimes it isn't a change of ownership, but instead a change in management that can breathe new life into projects. IAD Gold's Nevada assets are a prime example we have meaningful royalties on granite creek archimedes and mineral point which we acquired over a decade ago the relatively new team at i80 has a track record of successful mine development a solid plan and they just raised a billion dollars to implement it reserves and resources are the foundation of the mining business and it's no difference for royalty companies we measure our interests in attributable geos essentially the net interest in the owner's gross mineral endowment represented by our royalty or stream our age eos grew significantly in 2025 through acquisitions as well as exploration and development success at existing operations 2p reserves have increased across the spectrum of our interests principle producing and development which will support our current production profile and near-term growth while we've also seen balanced growth and exclusive M&I resources providing confidence in the longer-term outlook. To close off on our portfolio attributes, duration has long been a knock against rural gold relative to peers and one that along with diversification we've been particularly focused on addressing. The left-hand chart is where we stood at the beginning of last year based on operator reported life which it should be noted generally does not assume resource conversion unless the project is still at a pre-reserve stage. Based on our portfolio at the end of 2024, we would have today a NAV-weighted average life of mine of under 15 years, with only around 20% of our NAV coming from assets with two decades plus of potential. But through organic developments over the past year, such as the Milligan extension and the four-mile PEA, and through the acquisition of long-life assets such as Consanchi, Mara, Platte Reef, Orinsa, Oyutogoy, that average mine life now stands at 18 years, with over half of our nav deriving from a diversified group of assets with greater than 20 years of operator reported life so i'll do all of these attributes set us up for positive share price performance first as bill mentioned it's important to note that we evaluate all our investment opportunities on a per share basis and we're careful with respect to issuing shares prior to sandstorm our share count had been relatively flat since 2012. however sandstorm was only available as an all-share transaction, but this had the benefit of preserving our liquidity during a busy time, which allowed us to continue to advance a strong pipeline of asset opportunities. This culminated in the Consanchi Goldstream transaction just a few weeks later. While consensus estimates at the time of the July sandstorm announcement suggested only modest NAV accretion, exposure to what is now a larger, longer-life portfolio has allowed us to benefit from positive developments in both our new and established assets all against a backdrop of strong commodity prices this has resulted in strong growth and consensus nav per share with estimates up 70 percent which is nearly twice the rate of increase compared to the gold price over the same period as is common with the announcement of a large all-share transaction our share price initially out underperformed however as soon as we closed all these transactions in the fall and our shareholder register began to stabilize we started to see some of this value reflected in our share price without performance versus our peers q4 was noisy with several one-time items related to m a expenses and the steps we had taken to simplify the portfolio but that noise is now behind us and we believe we are well positioned to continue to outperform through 2026 and beyond And our reasons for optimism can be seen in these charts. Our NAV multiple is heavily discounted relative to our large-cap peers, and in fact, much closer to the mid-caps. And there is a major disconnect in our forward-looking cash flow multiples compared to all peers, despite the fact that 2025 has increased our scale materially, and we now have a higher quality, more diversified, longer-duration portfolio from which we are forecasting significant growth. We hope that once the market fully understands the changes to our business undertaken last year, and we demonstrate the attributes of this larger portfolio through financial performance and development news flow, that this will be reflected in our valuation. With that, I will hand things over to Martin to talk about 2026 guidance, provide an inaugural long-term outlook, and to take a closer look at some of the assets that we expect to drive our growth.

Martin Raffield, Analyst — Other

Thanks very much, Jason. and as jason says i'm going to start off with a detailed view of our guidance for 2026 then i'm going to move on to talk about our inaugural five-year outlook and then i'm going to step into some more detail around those assets that support the guidance and the outlook so as you saw in our press release this morning 2026 is shaping up to be a year of strong growth for Royal Gold. And importantly, that growth is broad based across metals, across assets and across operators. We expect to see meaningful increases in sales volume across all metals with gold remaining the dominant contributor, followed by silver and copper. Gold has always been the anchor of our business and in 2026 it remains our primary driver. The highlights of our guidance are pretty straightforward. As we think about cadence through the year, we're expecting a modest back half weighting with a 48-52% split favoring the second half of the year. So essentially equivalent across the year. Precious metals remain the core of the business. About 90% of 2026 revenue is expected from precious metals and about 80% of the total sales from gold alone. our outlook reflects a higher royalty rate at cortez moving to three and a half to four percent overall for 2026 compared to 2.6 percent in 2025 the primary driver here is increased expected production from the crossroads open pit where we have a higher royalty rate this is a meaningful uplift and it demonstrates why we have continued to invest heavily in this world-class district. Next, 2026 will be the first full year of deliveries from Kinsanxi and the first full year of revenue from the Sandstorm Horizon interest that we acquired in 2025. Both add significant depth and longevity to our portfolio. We also have the first full year of production from Back River and Platte Reef, and while these two assets will not be major contributors in 2026, they're important for our longer term. Back River begins with a low royalty rate, and Platte Reef is still relatively early in the ramp-up with a delivery schedule that does not yet produce a full-year impact for us. Both of these assets we expect to grow into meaningful contributors over time. On the downside, we do expect silver recovery at Pueblo Viejo to remain below the level required for delivery of deferred silver ounces in 2026 and for the foreseeable future. Turning to costs, our DD&A guidance is higher than 2025, reflecting the full-year depletion from the Stand, Storm, and Horizon assets and from the Consensi streaming interest. We have included additional detail on the DD&A rates for our principal properties in the appendix to this presentation that provide insight into the underlying drivers for our overall DD&A. With respect to effective tax rate, we're expecting 17% to 22% in 2026, in line with prior years. Finally, I want to highlight one item not included in the 2026 guidance. We expect to receive 11,000 ounces of deferred gold consideration from Centera in the second half of the year. This gold will not be accounted towards our GEO revenue, but it is a meaningful delivery. Recall that this is the second delivery towards the 50,000-ounce deferred consideration we agreed to receive when we entered into the Mount Milligan Cost Support Agreement. All in all, 2026 represents broad-based growth, stronger contributions from several core assets, and the continued benefits of the investments we've made over the past several years. And now moving on to the one you've all been waiting for, five-year guidance. You've been waiting a long time for this, I guess. We recognize that 2025 was a lot for the market to digest. We heard your feedback. We wanted to give greater clarity, more transparency, and a longer-term view of how the portfolio evolves. So today, for the first time, we're providing a five-year outlook. Let me start with the overarching message. We've always had a strong conviction in this portfolio, in the quality of the operators, and in the pipeline of assets that will shape Royal Gold's future. What we're sharing today reflects that confidence. We do not intend to update this long-term outlook during the year, and next year when we provide 2027 guidance, we expect to release a new five-year outlook. At constant prices and using the midpoints of the ranges, we expect an approximate 17% revenue growth from 2026 through the next five years. This growth is driven by a number of assets that are either newly producing or expanding, and by several major development projects that are now progressing towards construction decisions. Let me highlight a few of the most important contributors in the five-year window. La India and Nicaragua, where metals exploration is targeting first production at the end of this year, 2026. Robertson, which is part of the Cortez complex and expected to reach first production in 2027. Hod Madden, where our royalty is expecting to begin contributing in 2028. Great Bear, where Kinross is targeting first production around the end of 2029. And Warinsa, a significant copper-gold project with expected first production in 2030. Overlaying these new mines is production growth from expansions at Comicao and Platte Reef, two assets where we have substantial exposure and strong confidence in operator capability. I'll make one important note specific to Hod Madden. You'll see that our outlook does not include any contributions from the Hod Madden JV interest. That's intentional. We have stated that we intend to restructure that interest into a form more consistent with our business model and will incorporate it into our guidance when we have a clearer view of what that structure will be. Looking beyond 2031, the growth potential continues. We expect further contributions from the continued expansion at Platte Reef, new production at Agua Rica at Glencore's Mara project, development at Four Mile, Cactus, and Guacamayo, and from the build-out of Oya Tolgoi into the Panel 1 JV area. And that's just the pipeline with defined plans. There is a substantial upside optionality in assets where operators are moving projects toward investment decisions including the Red Crisp Block Cave expansion, the Lawyer's Ranch project, and KSM, one of the most significant underdeveloped gold assets globally. The five-year guidance provides the market with clarity with respect to growth in the medium term. But the long-term runway beyond 2031 is even more compelling, and we believe that Royal Gold is uniquely well-positioned among our peers to benefit from these large, long-life projects. That brings me to the strength of our development pipeline. When we talk about Royal Gold's future, the message is simple. The pipeline is deep, it is diversified, and it is already moving forward. Many of these projects are owned and advanced by operators for whom the asset is a major strategic priority. These are not fringe assets. These are core development projects in the owner's portfolios. Some of the most material include the Great Bear, the flagship development project for Kinross. Formile, one of the most significant gold discoveries in recent decades for Barrick. Warinsa, a large-scale copper project central to Solaris' growth strategy. And Mara, a major project in Glencore's future copper profile. These catalysts extend into the next decade, creating multiple layers of future optionality and revenue growth for Royal Gold. One of the defining strengths of our business model is the multiplier effect created when operators invest in the assets where we hold interest. Every dollar our counterparties spend provide us with stronger mine plans, longer mine lives, and increased exposure to metal prices, all at zero incremental cost to royal gold. This is the optionality inherent in our business model. Any asset in our portfolio with potential for expansion or life extension creates direct value for us And if mine lives are extended, we benefit not just from the additional production But from the extended exposure to commodity prices, which enhances our initial return In 2025 alone, counterparties completed over 2 million meters of drilling across assets where we have exposure That is an extraordinary amount of exploration activity entirely funded by our operators, and it provides us with free optionality on any resulting discoveries. This level of activity is why organic growth within assets is such a critical factor when we evaluate new opportunities. We are not just buying into today's cash flow or what the market may see in the short term. We are getting exposure to future expansion and upside. Now let me move into the next section, where I'll walk through several of the assets where we have seen the most exciting developments, beginning with opportunities for expansion and mine life extension, and then turning to the new production that we expect across the portfolio. Let's begin with the Cortes Complex, one of the world's greatest gold mining districts and an area where Royal Gold has been invested since the very beginning. We have full royalty coverage across this entire complex from our 10 royalty agreements. Cortez is a mature producer with a long track record of steady output, but importantly, it's also an area with significant greenfield and brownfield potential. In 2022, we expanded our exposure by acquiring the Rio Tinto and Idaho royalties. At the time, we had strong conviction in the upside potential well before the market fully appreciated the long-term value. Recent developments have validated that conviction as the world-class potential is becoming clear. We now have overlapping royalty rates that provide variable diversified leverage across the district, positioning us to benefit from existing production, development projects, and future discoveries. Barrick continues to advance a multi-decade plan for the Cortez district as Four Mile, Robertson, and the continued ramp-up at Gold Rush each contribute to this growing pipeline. Note that Four Mile is not included in the graph as it currently resides with Barrick outside of the NGM joint venture. The production mix is expected to evolve as new deposits come online with the potential for consolidated operations extending to 2052 and beyond. Furthermore, planned conversion of resources to reserves could extend open pit operations to at least 2038. Four Mile deserves special attention. We have full coverage of this deposit at an effective GSR of 1.6%, and Barrick has described this as one of the most significant gold discoveries of the century. This is not hyperbole. Four Mile is already shaping up to be one of the most important projects in Barrick's future production profile, with preliminary estimates producing 600,000 to 750,000 ounces per year over 25 years. Barrick is moving quickly. They are spending more than $200 million this year alone on drilling, studies, and infrastructure. This is a foundational asset for them, something that will help them define their long-term production portfolio. We expect material production at 4 Mile to begin outside of our five-year outlook, but as outlined by Barrick, it will be a meaningful contributor through the 2030s, 2040s, and beyond. Resource growth continues at an extraordinary pace. In 2025, Barrick doubled the gold resource at 4 Mile, and at their current preliminary production estimates, we see the potential for the 4 Mile royalty to generate 9,500 to 12,000 ounces of royalty revenue per year for a period of roughly 25 years. There remains considerable potential for resource expansion, and the potential of this project alone is an example of why we expanded our exposure to the Cortez Complex in 2022. Moving to Gold Rush, the newest producing mine in the Cortez Complex. Gold Rush is ramping up towards 400,000 ounces per year by 2028, and we have a strong royalty footprint here as well. Most of our interest is an effective rate of 1.6% GSR, with a small area to the southeast where the rate increases to 2.3%. This is a high-quality underground mine with decades of potential ahead. Exploration drilling at Gold Rush continues to identify new mineralized targets in the vicinity of the main ore body, and we are confident that the resource and reserve will continue to grow here. As these systems continue to expand, Royal Gold stands to benefit directly as our royalties continue without any step-downs or caps. Next, Robertson. This is an advanced project at Cortez and is expected to become the next producing mine in the district with potential to extend the operating life of the Cortez oxide mill in addition to providing heap leach or feed. Unlike Formile and Goldrush, Robertson is a low-grade open pit mine, but it has scale and longevity that make it important. We hold an effective GSR of 2.6% here, giving us meaningful leverage once production begins. Taken together, Goldrush, Robertson, and Formile, together with extension potential at Cortez Hills Underground, create a multi-layered growth profile for Cortez over the next several years. Each of these is a major producer in its own right, and this slide shows the growth potential for the Goldrash and Robertson discoveries only. Cortez is a multi-mine producing complex that we think has continued upside potential, and our exposure expands the entire complex. Let me turn now to Mount Milligan. In September, Sentera announced a 10-year mine life extension to 2045. As the largest single interest in our portfolio in terms of revenue and NAV, this extension has a meaningful portfolio-level impact for Royal Gold. The average annual production through 2042 is expected to be approximately 150,000 ounces of gold and 69 million pounds of copper, followed by three years of processing of low-grade stockpiles. A 10% expansion to milk capacity is planned for 2028. This extension adds longevity, stability, and predictability to our revenue base. Exploration is ongoing, and the resource remains open to the West. Sentara is actively drilling in that direction, and the new tailings facility is being designed with potential expansion in mind. Sentara has expressed optimism that mine life could extend well beyond 2045. We're very pleased that the largest asset in that portfolio has at least two more decades of mine life, with the potential for further growth beyond that. Next is Komikawa, a high-quality copper-silver operation in Botswana. We hold a 100% silver stream, and the mine currently has a life to at least 2040. Royal Gold helped finance the original construction when the mine was ramping up to produce 60,000 tons of copper and 1.8 to 2 million ounces of silver per year. MMG has now broken ground on a major expansion at Comical. The $900 million program includes a new 4.5 million ton per year plant, raising total processing capacity to more than 8 million tons per year, and copper production to 130,000 tons a year. The throughput increase will be achieved by mining several new deposits, in addition to expanding the currently operating Zone 5 mine. The new mango deposit is within our stream AOI, and both Zone 5 and mango will be processed in the new higher-capacity process plant. We expect the expansion to increase our silver deliveries by nearly 35% on a life-of-mine basis. Drilling results below the Zone 5 resource at 1,300 meters have confirmed all-body continuity down to 1,800 meters. and MMG is considering a further capacity increase up to a target of 200,000 tons of copper per year. This is another multi-decade material asset for royal gold run by a well-capitalized counterparty with the resources to execute the expansion plans. Moving to Kinsansi, one of Africa's largest copper mines and our newest principal asset. We acquired this gold stream interest in 2025 and we expect it to provide steady long-life cash flow with a mine plan that extends through at least 2049. Consanxi is a copper mine with a relatively small portion of revenue from low-grade gold production. Our stream ties gold deliveries to copper production, which should smooth out the delivery profile as we are not exposed to gold grade or recovery risk. The S3 expansion at Consanxi reached commercial production in December and we expect deliveries to Royal Gold to grow over the next several years as the plants ramp up to the full 52 million ton per annum capacity. Based on current guidance and the technical report, we expect 35,000 to 40,000 ounces of gold per year to our account during the first 10 years. This positions Consanxi as a major revenue driver for Royal Gold. Let's turn now to Zavanchina, a high-grade underground gold mine that we entered in 2021 through a 25% gold stream. The mine has a current life through 2032, and the operator, Eero Copper, has continued to execute well. When we acquired our stream interest, we saw clear upside potential, driven by a highly prospective and under-explored land package and an under-utilized mill. Since then, improvements have been strong across the board with a longer mine life, higher annual production, and increased reserves and resources. ERO is focused on both extending mine life and discovering new vein structures, and within the next three years, they are targeting an extension to a 10-year life of mine. Like Cortez, Zaventina is an asset where we saw significant upside that wasn't immediately clear to the market. We are pleased with how ERA has continued to advance their plans in 2025, and in 2025 we increased our investment and expanded our area of interest, reflecting our continued confidence in the upside potential. Next is Red Chris, a producing copper gold mine operated by Newmont in British Columbia's Golden Triangle. This is a long-life asset with a mine life outline to 2050 with the introduction of underground block cave mining. The open pit is relatively modest compared to what the underground could become in the future. Newmont expects to complete the feasibility study for the block cave in the second half of 2026, and they have allocated $160 million in development capital this year. They expect to take a development proposal to the board in the middle of this year. Assuming a positive decision by Newmont, the project has significant support within Canada, and the Canadian government has designated the project as being one of five projects of national interest. Once developed, the block cave could transform Red Chris into one of the most significant long-life copper gold projects in North America, And our royalty covers the entirety of the resource that has been defined so far. That covers the assets where we see significant growth, expansion, and extension potential. I'd now like to turn to some of the assets where we expect new stream revenues in the years ahead. Platte Reef is a world-class large-scale PGM asset in South Africa operated by Ivanhoe Mines. This is a multi-decade ore body with exceptional thickness and continuity and first ore was processed in December of last year. Operations are now ramping up steadily as the mine advances through its staged development plan. Royal Gold holds a gold stream, and when the mine fully ramps up, we expect contributions of 15,000 to 20,000 ounces per year into the 2040s. Flat Reef is being developed through a phased expansion approach where Phase 1 was initiated. Phase 1 initiated first production in late 2025 and provides early revenue and establishes the initial mining infrastructure. Phase 2 is designed to increase hoisting and processing capacity meaningfully as shaft 3 comes online and in the first half of this year, enabling throughput ramp-up to start building up to more than 4 million tons per year. Phase 3, currently in planning, is expected to further scale the operation with additional concentrator capacity and expanded mining areas. This phase represents a significant step change in the long-term production profile and supports the potential for Platte Reef to become one of the largest and most efficient PGM operations globally. What sets Platte Reef apart is the thickness and geometry of the ore body. The ore body is 18 to 26 meters wide, making it suitable for fully mechanized mining. Compared to the very narrow, historic mines on the Marensky Reef and UG2, the wide ore body provides significant advantages in terms of safety, efficiency, manpower requirements, and cost structure. We are looking forward to receiving first revenue from Plat Reef within the next quarter. MARA is one of the most material assets we acquired through the Sandstorm Horizon transaction. Operated by Glencore, this is a large brownfield cropper project in Argentina, and our interest includes a royalty that we have the option to convert into a 20% gold stream on the Agua Rica portion of the project in exchange for $225 million of payments funded during the construction period. Based on Glencore's gold production forecasts, we expect approximately 22,000 ounces per year over the 23-year mine life. A key advantage of MARA is that the past-producing Alambrera mine will be restarted while the Agua Rica project is being constructed. The restart will focus on pushbacks on the existing Alambrera pits, which, in addition to ore production, will enable historic high-wall instability to be addressed so that the pits can be used for future tailing storage during the mining of Agua Rica. The principal infrastructure project associated with the Agua Rica deposit will be the 35-kilometre ore conveyor, which includes 5 kilometres of underground tunnelling. The restart FID for Alambrero was approved in Q4 2025, and first production is targeted for half 1-2028. Glencore expects approval of the RIGI application in the first half of this year, a final investment for Agua Rica targeted for 2027, with first production for Agua Rica in the second half of 2031. Importantly, this asset has progressed more quickly than we expected when we acquired it through the sandstorm transaction. Great Bear remains the centerpiece of Kinross' development pipeline, Located in Red Lake, Ontario, a region of extensive deep mining experience, the PEO released in 2024 outlined 500,000 ounces per year over the first eight years of operation. We hold a 2% NSR on the project. Kinross is focused on engineering, permitting, and exploration throughout 2026. The Advanced Exploration Underground Program, or AEX, is progressing well and will provide exploration access at depth. AEX construction is expected to begin this year, pending the receipt of two provincial permits. Similar to Red Chris, government support for project development is strong, and the Government of Ontario has included Great Bear in the One Project, One Process framework. This is intended to fast-track approvals under a streamlined permitting regime. Drilling continues to demonstrate the Great Bear is a multi-decade asset with substantial upside. We expect the potential at depth to become clearer once Kinross is able to access deeper exploration upon completion of the AEX. This is a world-class project with outstanding long-term potential. Warinsa is a significant copper-molybdenum gold project located in Ecuador. We acquired a gold stream and a royalty in 2025. Shortly after we acquired our interest, Solaris released a PFS outlining a 22-year mine life with strong potential for an additional 25 to 30 years of extension based on existing resources. Our gold stream is expected to deliver 10,000 ounces per year average for the first five years, 8,000 ounces average for the first 15 years, and the royalty delivers 3,000 GEOs over the first five years and 2,500 GEOs over the first 15 years, assuming that the stream and royalty rates are at full levels. Solaris expects to achieve... Excuse me. Solaris expects to achieve technical approval for the EIA shortly, whereupon we will make a payment of $50 million, followed by a further $50 million in May on the one-year anniversary of the transaction closing, bringing our total investment in the project to $200 million. Solaris expects to release a feasibility study and begin early works in the second half of 2026. Cactus is a past-producing copper project in Arizona with a strong management team behind it. We acquired the royalty in late 2024 from a private seller who approached us. The PFS outlines a 22-year mine life with 198 million pounds of copper produced per year. A feasibility study is expected in late 2026 with a potential investment decision as early as Q4 2026. Hudbay's recent agreement to acquire Arizona Sonoran may adjust the timeline, but it also brings the strength of a larger balance sheet and the commitment of a company that has other mining interests in Arizona. Our 2% NSR covers all of Cactus East, Cactus West, and parts of the park's cellular all-body. At full production, we expect an average of about 4,500 GEOs per year. There are multiple opportunities to extend the mine life through the processing of primary sulfides, Cactus East underground mining, infill drilling to upgrade inferred material, and drilling of the Northeast extension. While we don't have complete royalty coverage of the Park Salia pit, the mineralization plunges in this area onto our royalty ground, and all of the other upsides fall within our royalty footprint. Guacamayo is located in San Juan, Argentina, owned and operated by a private Argentine entity. It is currently generating a small amount of revenue from oxide residual leach processing. The real value to this project lies in the Deep Carbonates project, or DCP, beneath the previously mined oxides. We have a 2.5% NSR on the DCP and a $30 million production payment when commercial production begins. The DCP is outlined as a 17-year mine life at 120,000 ounces production per year. This was the first gold project to receive approval under Argentina's new riggy process. A feasibility study is underway. Construction is expected in 2028, and first production is currently planned for 2030. We expect this project to contribute approximately 2,500 royalty ounces per year to our account at full production levels. The Goose mine in the Back River District is operated by B2 Gold and reached commercial production in October last year. Production at Goose is ramping up and is expected to average more than 300,000 ounces per year for the first five years. Royal Gold holds royalty on most of B2 Gold's properties in the Back River District, which is a relatively unexplored gold belt stretching approximately 80 kilometers. Most of the exploration completed to date is in the area of the Goose and George claims, and we have full royalty coverage over these areas. We have multiple overlapping royalties at Goose, And our overall royalty rate ramps up over time from the current rate of 0.35 to 0.7%, increasing to a 2.5% GSR after 400,000 ounces of cumulative production, which we expect in 2027. And then increasing again to 3.3% GSR after 780,000 ounces of production cumulatively, which we expect in 2028. We expect Goose to become a significant contributor to Royal Gold in 2027, with a contribution of 9,000 to 10,000 ounces per year when production reaches steady state and our royalty increases to 3.3% after 2028. B2 Gold and its predecessor companies have been focused on developing the Goose project rather than further exploration. As the mine transitions into operations, B2 has recently increased its focus on exploration, including evaluating potential at depth. Last week, B2 Gold outlined its 2025 exploration program for the Back River District, noting that results to date demonstrate the potential to further extend the mine life at Goose through the possible addition of the Nuvuyak deposit to the mine plan. In addition to further exploration in 2026, both at Goose and regionally, B2 is also evaluating additional opportunities at Goose, including leach process expansions, plant throughput increases, and improved underground productivity and cost efficiency scenarios. Back River remains early in its mine life, and we believe that there is meaningful upside ahead. Hod Madden is widely recognized as one of the highest quality undeveloped gold copper deposits in the world. The mine design is compact and efficient with a straightforward underground layout that significantly reduces execution risk. Capital investment is already significant. About $80 million was spent in 2025, and SSR has reported plans to spend roughly $15 million per month on early works through to a final investment decision. This early work reduces uncertainty because many critical path items are already progressing, which provides clearer visibility on timelines. This project stands out due to its high grades relative to comparable scale projects. The grades are exceptional, which drives strong margins and makes the project resilient across commodity cycles. Very few development projects offer this combination of scale, grade, and simplicity. While the current mine life is relatively short at 10 years, the exploration potential in the region is high, and there is real potential for mine life extension. A new feasibility study was released earlier this year, nearly $80 million of capital spent in 2025 to advance the project and confirm the robust production profile and other project parameters. We think Hod Madden is an excellent project. It will be a strong producer, and there is meaningful upside potential in additional resources converting to reserves. We currently own a 2% NSR on the project, as well as a 30% JV interest. As we've said previously, we intend to convert the JV interest into a structure that more closely aligns with our royalty streaming business. As such, our long-term guidance does not yet include any contribution from the conversion of the HODMAD and JV interest, which may represent additional upside not included in today's outlook. Okay, and that takes me through the general overview, so the next 50 slides that I'll present really get into the detail of each of these projects. No? I hope this overview gives you a clear sense of the strength, depth, and longevity of our portfolio. We are seeing significant progress across multiple assets with consistent investment from our operating partners and a development time pipeline that extends well into the 2030s. Royal Gold is positioned for multi-year, multi-asset growth with a balanced combination of near-term catalysts, mid-term development, and long-term optionality. Thank you for your time and attention today.

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

With that, we'll just take a 10-minute break, if that's all right for everybody. So please return to your seats within 10 minutes, and we'll start again, and we'll finish off and move into Q&A. Thank you. I think, everybody, we're ready to start the second half of the session today. So I'll invite Paul Libner up to the stage.

Paul Libner, CFO

First, let me just start off by saying thanks for so many of you coming. I know some long distance with travel to be here, so really appreciate it. great to see so many familiar faces here today. Martin just provided a lot of really good information and information that we're certainly very excited about for 2026 and beyond. But in this section I want to spend a few minutes talking about how we think about capital allocation. I'll provide a quick update on our revolver and our current liquidity as well. I'll then turn things over to Dan Breeze who will talk about the business development market and how we consider opportunities to redeploy our capital. Effective allocation of capital is a key component of our business. Our strategy has been consistent for many years and is driven by the overall objective of providing growth in per share metrics. As shown on the slide here, our capital allocation priorities are built on three pillars. The first pillar, investing in creative growth. The second pillar, maintain strong balance sheet and liquidity, all while making sure we have the available liquidity to execute quickly on opportunities. Then the third pillar, return capital to shareholders. Royal Gold has a strong record of executing on all three pillars, but I'd like to highlight three areas that we will always prioritize. First, we will always prioritize non-dilutive capital for new opportunities. This is evident in our share count. Even after issuing nearly 19 million shares as part of the Sandstorm transaction back in October, we still have the lowest share count on the GDX and we've been listed for nearly 45 years. Second, we will use debt strategically and conservatively as opportunities allow. The operating cash flow that we generate from diversified revenue sources within our portfolio gives us comfort that we can repay our debt quickly. And as we have said in the past, we are comfortable taking our leverage ratio to three times net debt to EBITDA if we can reduce that leverage ratio to say two times or less within 12 months. Finally, we are committed to paying a growing and sustainable dividend. Our dividend is progressive and is not tied to any mechanical targets. We don't trade on yield, but many of our investors like the consistent history of dividend growth as it demonstrates shareholder returns are a priority. Then as Bill mentioned, we continue to be the only precious metals company in the S&P high yield dividend risk tax index. Our framework for capital allocation is simple. We have to be flexible as market conditions and the deal environment change. We think the best way for us to add value to shareholders is by adding high-quality, long-duration assets to the portfolio. We target double-digit returns over the long term, and by using cash or debt to finance these acquisitions, we limit equity dilution, and we should grow our NAV per share. While we have historically liked to use debt to finance our growth given the high-margin nature of our business, maintaining strong liquidity is very important in our business because transactions often come up quickly, and we always want to ensure we can execute timely without financing conditions or limitations. Our revolver capacity in cash provide the liquidity to reinvest in assets that provide further optionality to our shareholders. We have a 25-year history of dividend growth, a history that is core to royal gold, is unique in the precious metals sector, and a history we expect to continue. We typically review our dividend each November with our board, and during this review we consider various price and operational sensitivities going out five plus years. We will consider special dividends and share buybacks, but we have rarely been in a position with significant excess cash where we are not able to reinvest in high-quality assets or accretive transactions. We also rarely see opportunities where it makes valuation sense for us to repurchase our shares, but we will be mindful should market conditions change or present an opportunity for further return of capital. We view cash as a strategic asset that provides optionality as it allows us to quickly act on opportunities and we would not want to prioritize capital return at the expense of good growth assets. How we define excess cash is subject to change depending on market conditions. And as Dan will explain, we are always looking at opportunities and we must be mindful of liquidity in terms of a changing deal pipeline that could extend beyond a year. Now just a few comments on our revolver and our liquidity. I view our revolving credit facility as a key strategic financing tool, and a tool that is flexible and low cost. We increased our revolver capacity to $1.4 billion from $1 billion in the third quarter of last year. Our revolver has commitments from seven banks, many of which are represented here today, and I again thank each one of you for your continued support of Royal Gold. We have a long history of drawing on our revolver to fund acquisitions and paying it back quickly from operating cash flows. Prior to last year with the Sandstorm acquisition, we had not issued shares since 2012, and we financed high-quality acquisitions like PV, Cortez, Anticoil, and Consangy, all from the Revolver. These are multi-decade assets, and the short-term interest costs of using the Revolver is greatly outweighed by the long-term value of those assets that we acquired. Since the closing of the Sandstorm transaction, we have been focused on debt servicing. Upon closing in late October, we had just over $1.2 billion of debt outstanding. While this was low from a perspective of leverage ratio, this was the highest level of debt we have ever carried here at Royal Gold. And as illustrated on the slide here, we have made significant progress in reducing our debt and rebuilding our liquidity. Since November, we have repaid $625 million on our revolver and now have $600 million outstanding and $800 million available. At these metal prices, and absent any significant acquisitions, I expect to have the remaining revolver repaid in late Q4 or early Q1 of 2027. This is about two quarters ahead of what we expected when we close the Sandstorm transaction. As Jason mentioned, we also have realized some value from the sale of some non-core assets that we acquired from Sandstorm. But more importantly, the pace of this debt repayment should provide a really good sense of the cash flow generation potential from this expanded portfolio. As others have said before me, 2025 was indeed a transformational year for Royal Gold, and in a short period, we have returned our balance sheet to a strong position, and we have rebuilt our liquidity, ensuring we can remain active in new opportunities. And with that, I'll now turn things over to Dan Brees, who's going to give us an update on the current business development market.

Dan Breeze, Analyst — Other

All right. Yeah, thanks, Paul. Good afternoon, everybody. Over the next few minutes, I'd like to share some of our thoughts on the trends we're seeing in the streaming and royalty sector. We're going to look at the approach that we take to business development. That's where I spend most of my time with the company. And then we'll look at where we think we're unique in the market and where we have a competitive advantage. We'll give you some examples in the portfolio to speak to that. And we'll look at some returns of several key assets in the portfolio, really just to show how our approach has worked over the long term to deliver shareholder returns in the long term. We were one of the first companies in the sector, we've been around for about four decades, and we believe that we've built an internal capacity and skill set to compete and succeed in this market. We are very much like a portfolio manager in so much as we have some of the same attributes, but we never sell our investments. We hold them in perpetuity. And that means our process is very important to us in terms of how we make these investments in the first place. So let's start with this slide, which is looking at the broad sector across a period of time of about 15 years or so. this shows the dollar value of streaming royalty transactions as well as corporate M&A over that time period and I think there are a few takeaways to highlight to you. The first is you'll notice that transactions in our sectors they tend to be very lumpy from year to year. We in the sector we tend to be deal takers. At the end of the day we are relying on external factors like what's happening in the commodity market, what's happening in the mining sector, how healthy it is and so that's just the lay of the land in terms of how things generally work. Secondly there's a general trend you'll notice as we move to to the right side of the chart of an increasing dollar value of transactions over time. 2025 you can see it was a record year in our industry for both royalty and stream transaction standalone deals as well as M&A. Royal Gold accounted for roughly half of the transactions that that were done last year and then again you can see in the on the chart 2026 we're already at a record year for standalone stream and royalty deals. The trend indicates that we are a growing sector and it's a really good message for the market to leave given that there is increasing liquidity to deploy in our sector as Paul's talked about specific to Royal Gold. Lastly corporate M&A is infrequent but you can see it's picked up somewhat over the last last few years there has been some consolidation in the industry mostly in the smaller end of the market certainly we were active as as we've talked about with with Jason section with our deal with sandstorm and and horizon copper last year so continuing on with the the sector with this chart this shows three broad categories of peers again over that 15-year time span. We have the so-called big three that's where royal gold fits and that's the that's the gold bars the mid caps the dark blue bars and then the smaller cap names and other non traditional players in the sector with the light blue bars. Market share here is measured as a percentage of the total total dollar value of new streams and royalties that transacted in a year. So it doesn't include third-party royalties in the status set. You can see as we move from left to right on the left side early in the life of our sector the larger and at that time more established companies were the most active and that's not surprising to see. As we move to the middle part of the charts the growth of the emerging mid cap names picked up and that increased competition and it did reduce and erode market share from the big three as you can see but since the early 2020s the the major companies have reclaimed the market share that they lost and the question is what what's happened to the market what's driving this there's no doubt that competition is still very very much strong it hasn't really changed over that that time span but deals are trending to the larger size and what that means is the cost of capital in our industry is becoming a much more important factor when we're competing against uh in this case usually debts where we're looking at large large opportunities and scale and size really make a difference in the market so i think that's the trend that we're uh we're generally seeing at the moment in the sector so let's turn and look a little bit more closely at the streaming market with this slide streaming has really grown to be the dominant form of financing compared to royalties and that's really due to efficiencies that both the operator and the streamer gain by using the streaming product for us if you look back at our 2025 revenue streaming accounted for roughly two-thirds of our revenue just to give you a sense about how it fits in our portfolio although we are economically indifferent between streams and royalties we tend to be more focused on on streaming opportunities and that's just because they tend to be larger in size and we can write our own contracts and tailor them to what we need to protect ourselves so that's generally how we look at things this slide shows the transaction size distribution and average deal size over the last 20 years and again i think there are a few points that we can we can leave with you the first is when we look at the pie chart the majority of stream transactions have been less than 300 million dollars in size the market's generally made up of a number of of smaller deals at the end of the day but for us royal gold say a 200 million dollar deal is material to us given our relative size in the market that's probably not the case where our larger peers they have to put a few of those deals together to to kind of make up with that materiality that that we see right away secondly the average deal size has trended up in the last few years i just mentioned that in the last slide but you can see that on the bar chart here And again, I think it's just a function of the market that we're seeing right now. 40% of the large deals, let's say the $500 million plus deals, going back to 2004, have transacted in the last six years. So there's been an acceleration of the large deals in our market. Part of that growth is because the stream financing product has become more mainstream. And what we find is most operators now include streaming as part of their menu when they look at options in terms of how they're going to finance a project. The final point is, although large deals, as we can see here, are quite rare in our industry, we believe that we have the experience and the creativity and liquidity to compete and win on these transactions, like the $1 billion Consanche Goldstream that Jason talked about last year. That was one of the largest standalone stream deals ever in the sector to trade. Let's move on to this slide, which breaks down the sources of deals over the last 15 years. And the pie chart shows the use of proceeds. Most deals come from streams to support project development, from balance sheet strengthening, and what we call value arbitrage. So that's realizing the value of a non-core precious metal in a core base metal asset. as an example. We've seen some recent examples of that in the market. However, you can see that third-party royalties have been a material source of deal flow over the years, and many of these transactions involve small royalties, but there are exceptions, and our 2022 acquisitions of two royalties over the Cortez complex were quite large. More than $700 million in size are good examples of that. I think what's happening is the higher commodity prices are motivating royalty holders to sell into a very strong market lots of willing buyers lots of liquidity and i think that's fueling the the transactions that we're seeing 80 of the third party royalty deals in the last 15 years have traded in the last five years again you can see the acceleration of the market in terms of what we're seeing i think it's also fair to say that third party royalties and streams and i mentioned streams we don't see very very many third party streams in our market they typically come to the market quickly and not with a lot of visibility in terms of in terms of the process that generally brings them to the market and generally what happens is once they trade that's it they never trade again so it's probably fair to say that it may not always be a robust source of deal flow given those dynamics so i'm going to shift now to how the business development process works at royal gold and we'll use the next few slides to talk through this. Our investment criteria are simple, it's consistent, and it's long-term focused. And our framework is based on what we call the three P's, people, projects, and place. For people, we're assessing the experience of the counterparty, their ability to finance, to execute, and to manage risk responsibly over the long term. Ownership changes happen when, we've seen that in our own portfolio when an asset or a company is sold we have to work hard to build the new relationships but we also build in protection in our in our contracts and information rights and things like that that allow a consistency from our side when when there is a change in ownership on the project we take a very fundamental and technically driven view we evaluate the asset from both our perspective as well as the perspective of of the operator for example when we look at a stream, we think about the ASIC over the life of mine, how is that going to impact not only us but the mining operation at different metal prices and we consider that in our analysis. A key focus for us as well is long-term resource growth and we prioritize assets with expansion upside to increase the potential for returns over the long term. And finally place, we also prioritize established mining jurisdictions as a general rule of thumb given that governments can change during the life of mine and we've seen lots of examples of that in the world. We also consider how an investment will fit within our existing portfolio and its impact in our strategic goals. We look at, for example, the pro forma metals mix. We want to maintain a high weighting in precious metals, in particular gold. We look at concentration risk. What does this asset do to the NAV makeup of the overall portfolio? And then we consider whether the investment, the asset quality, will ultimately upgrade the portfolio as an ultimate test. Ideally we prefer to identify opportunities through relationships and our own initiatives working towards a bilateral opportunity and transaction that's that's what we covet the most but what we are seeing is more opportunities in particular the larger ones are ending up in advisor-led processes and we're competing against our peers as well as as other forms of capital. We may pass on an opportunity for various reasons but if there isn't a fatal flaw we'll continue to monitor it maybe there's a study that will come out that will de-risk the opportunity and we'll go back and revisit it and see if there's an opportunity for us to put some money to work I'm going to spend a moment looking at our evaluation and execution process with this slide the process involves professionals from a number of fields of expertise working together typically under very tight timelines we We get Bill very active, given his background. He gets involved early in business development opportunities, and then we have access to the experience of the Royal Gold Board of Directors as well. We typically look at upwards of 100 opportunities in any given year, and we may only transact on one or two or none, as we're going to look at it in a moment on another slide. It just speaks to our very disciplined approach in terms of how we look at deploying capital. Through diligence, we establish a view on the asset and how the asset will perform over its life. What are the risks? What are the opportunities? A key part of the diligence process is trying to uncover that intrinsic optionality in an asset. And we want to capture that because we believe that's one of the key reasons why our shares command a premium in the marketplace. place. Diligence is followed by financial evaluation where we're determining a fair value for the investment. We're looking at the risk rewards that we identified in the diligence process and then we need to structure and the contract and protect our interests while at the same time trying to meet the unique requirements that might exist for a particular operator. Because these are perpetual agreements at the end of the day we need to show some flexibility over the life of contract to allow the operator to run their business without unreasonable constraints so we we do consider that as well. These steps can be completed in two to three months from an agreed term sheet to final documentation which I think is a competitive advantage when you look at other sources of capital in particular debt which could take a much longer period of time. Thereafter the the contract needs to be managed. We have regular dialogue with most of our counterparties and we go to site regularly for certainly for a larger investments as well again making sure we have that baked into our contracts in terms of site visit and information rights so let's look at the the royal gold transaction history with this chart and this shows more than five and a half billion dollars of standalone acquisitions have occurred over the last two decades or so we're always busy looking at opportunities but over the long run on average we transact one or two times a year so it's fairly infrequent at the end of the day transactions i mentioned this already they tend to be lumpy you can see that very clearly with with this chart and it's it is hard to predict as we just discussed earlier as well but we need to be ready to move quickly as a team paul talked about liquidity we need to access liquidity efficiently to transact we have a highly diversified portfolio as martin's talked about that supports organic growth we have that five-year forecast now out in the market and that really allows us to be patient and disciplined and not chase growth and not go offside in terms of in terms of our investment criteria and stay very disciplined we typically don't target corporate acquisitions and transactions we do track our competitors maybe there's an opportunity that might fit at some point strategically but in general that's not what we've really focused on We've done two material corporate transactions in the last 15 years, obviously the Sandstorm and Horizon deal and then IRC back in 2010. So again, very infrequent. We're often asked by both investors and potential counterparties, how does ROGOLD differentiate itself versus our peer group? And we believe the answer to that is creativity. And what do we mean by creativity? We really try to listen to an operator about what considerations are most important to them and then we develop a bespoke structure and product that works well for both parties and to make that point we have four examples shown on this slide just to demonstrate creativity and a strong approach to to partnership and i'll just run through these very quickly jason and martin covered the investment that we made last year in consanche we worked with first quantum as as the operator uh really to understand their needs and constraints and and we study their credit position very closely. That was a key feature of that company going back 12 months ago as you might remember. We then developed a structure with a partial buyback or two partial buybacks when that they can exercise when their credit profile and position materially improves. We also structured that transaction such that the gold stream was referenced to recovered copper and that aligned ourselves to the core product of that particular mine and that allowed us to de-risk our investment and give them a better cost of capital at the end of the day. At Mount Milligan we worked with our partner Sentara Gold in 2024 to provide cost support in the form of higher future cash prices for our gold and copper streams and that gave Sentara the confidence to go ahead and move forward with mine life extension plans where we're both going to benefit over the long term. At Javentina we made our initial investment with the operator era copper in 2021 we saw the long-term geologic potential of the asset then and we included incremental funds to support exploration and resource growth and that's paid off very well for for both parties since then more recently we worked with error to provide finance in the form of an incremental gold stream over that project and that is supporting further growth that will continue to benefit both of us as well Finally, just to round things out, at Comacao, we made our investment there in 2019, and we included an incremental stream alongside of our core stream or base stream, and then we provided a debt facility just to round out a financing package for the operator, and that was really to be used at the operator's option for supporting mine development in the case where additional capital was needed during the build, and that actually was the case. They drew down all those incremental funds as well. let's move to the next slide and we'll use the next two slides to make a couple of points and looking at the returns in our portfolio we'll start with this slide this is the internal rate of return or irr for six of our largest single asset investments in the portfolio the returns shown are scotia's estimates at the time of the investments those are the blue bars and then they've been updated for January 2026 that's the gold bars the returns shown or well we'll get to the returns in just a moment the takeaway but I think what the overall analysis demonstrates is the value that's created in our sector over the long term and just the power of the business model and we thank Tanya and the Scotia Scotia research team for for providing the data set to us but you'll note that the returns were moderates at the time that these deals were announced but have increased materially since then. And the question is, what's happened? What's driving that? Certainly one of the reasons is commodity prices have changed. But another key reason is while we spent months assessing a project and its potential leading up to a transaction, the market generally has very limited information on these investments that we make. Limited information results in moderate day-one returns, in our view, as assessed by the market. But as more information is available to the market, let's say there's an expansion or an extension of a particular project that comes out the market absorbs that and the returns increase as a result in most cases in our experience it takes developments that may occur over years for investment case to be fully understood by the market and again another good example of that is cortez where in 2022 the royalty transactions the two deals that we did were met with a lukewarm response by the market but fast forward to last year barrack released the preliminary four mile pea results and you can see the returns the expectations have grown materially as a result i think today if you ask analysts i think they would agree that these were good transactions and that we've acquired some of the some of the best royalties ever created move to the next slide which is a different way to look at value in our portfolio and it covers the same six investments. The blue bars show the size of the initial investments that we made and the dark gold bars show the cumulative cash we've received for each of these assets going through to the end of end of 2025. The light gold bars show the current consensus NAVs for these projects as well and they generally don't include resource conversion they're generally based on life of mine reserve type calculations as well so there should be more to be to be out of there in due course. On a cash in cash out basis we have recovered in our initial investments at Andacoyo, at Pueblo Viejo and Mount Milligan and you can see the market sees significant value yet to come in those assets. Our model requires time but excess returns emerge when we invest in assets with with long-term growth and we can fully capture that these are perpetual investments with no sustaining capital and so that really drives the model in terms of long-term returns. I'm going to finish with a comment on our history of disciplined capital allocation as measured by impairments in our portfolio with this slide. We shared the rigorous due diligence approach that we take internally before we make an investment decision. The rigor has resulted in very high a very high rate of success over the long term in terms of our investment history and to quantify that success only one percent of the roughly ten billion dollars of investments we've made to date were impaired and and removed from our portfolio as a portfolio manager that can't easily sell or never sells as i said at the start of the presentation our our investments and certainly underperforming investments to limit losses i think that's an excellent record to show the market it demonstrates that our approach and diligence and execution that we've covered off has been successful in in the long term i'm gonna hand things over to alistair now he's going to talk about some of the unique aspects of royal gold all right thank you dan so i'm just going

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

to talk about some of the unique attributes of royal gold from the perspective of a listed equity we are large cap and liquid and our business model is really unique in a sector where there aren't very many quality alternatives our target audience is the generalist investor and beyond our business model we have several attributes that we think make us very investable for those generalist investors. So we have a, we occupy a very unique position in the marketplace. We're the only US domicile company in our sector. All of our peers are Canadian. That's important because it opens us up to those funds who have US only mandates. There is a scarcity of quality precious metals equities in the US that meet institutional mandates and Royal Gold is definitely one of those. Our register is different from our peers as a result of that though. About 85% of our register is institutional investors with a relatively small retail component. We have a much higher passive component than Canadian peers just given membership in the US indices. We are included globally in about 250 equity indices and about 38% of our shares are held by index funds and you can break them down into three categories broadly speaking. The first and largest would be major global equity indices like the S&P 400. That's about 70%. 20% would be precious metals and mining, so funds like the GDX. And then 10% would be factor and strategic or strategy funds. Those are funds that track specific characteristics so they could be sustained dividend growth over time or what have you. Now this is important to note because sometimes we don't trade in line with our Canadian peers, certainly not on a daily basis. For example, on a bad day for the general markets, it may be a good day for gold. We may lag our Canadian peers, and the opposite may happen when the general markets are up and the gold price is flat. But over a couple of days, that difference tends to correct if valuations do get distorted. Now, the precious metals sector There is a small part of the US marketplace and there seems to be a mismatch between gold's macro importance and its equity market weight in the US market. Within the S&P 500, there's only one gold company that's a member and that's Newmont and it has a 0.2% weighting. So you can find academic papers that will say you should have 5% or 10 or 15% of your well-diversified portfolio in gold. not here to debate that. I think what is clear though is that the the point two is a lot lower than whatever that right weighting is. And it looks like many institutional investors are underweight gold. Their allocations are often cyclical and reactive and they're not strategic. So if that were to change, if we saw a shift in allocations, if you assume a hundred trillion dollars of equity investments globally, a 1% weighting change would mean 1 trillion of demand, so that's two times the entire gold sector. We're very well positioned, we think, because there is a scarcity value or scarcity of precious metals alternatives. Market cap, liquidity, consistent performance, they all make us very investable. We're not in the S&P 500 today, but we were just included in the Bloomberg 500. So that is hopefully something we can say we're definitely one of the largest 500 in the US market. Now, since closing the Sandstorm transaction, our register has continued to grow and evolve, and we've increased our institutional shareholder base. We do have a very high quality register. Our institutional shareholders tend to be long-term holders of large positions. And you can see that if you look at the passives. They own about 134,000 shares on average, 21 year holding history. Actives would be about 64,000 shares with 11 year holding history. Sandstorm had a very large retail component on their register and we believe that most of those retail holders have sold and those shares have been picked up by institutions. And that's evidence as you can see in the graph here by the number of institutional holders that have, we've got on a register since the announcement of the transaction in the middle of last year. Passives did grow their positions but you would argue that's largely because of the increased market cap. Actives have grown their positions by over 20 percent and that's the target that we're trying to to hit. Now we've seen net institutional buying over the past two years. You can see it very clearly on this chart. Our marketing efforts have been really to get in front of generalists who institutions who don't know our business model well and our market strategy is looking for those generalists who want exposure to precious metals but they don't want to do the homework on mining assets within mining equities. We've been pretty successful we think in converting some of those generalists those introduction meetings into holders. Q3 does look a little bit unusual on this chart and but I think that was likely because of the additional shares that we issued as a result of the Sandstorm transaction. We've now returned to trend in the fourth quarter. So it does look like our message is resonating with our target audience. Now another thing that is a unique attribute for Royal Gold for our size is trading liquidity. We've seen an increase in our liquidity over the past several past couple of quarters really. I think some of this is structural and you can see this with our large cap peers shown here as well. There's just more interest generally in precious metals now than there was a year ago but we've also issued an additional 30 percent or so new shares and we're now trading consistently over a million shares a day which is twice where we were this time last year the amovest liquidity ratio which is shown on this chart here it provides a good metric it shows you how much trading volume is required to move a stock price by one percent and so a higher value is is an indicator of higher liquidity because you need to trade that much more to be able to impact the price. We've materially increased our liquidity compared to our large cap peers and that's I think the largest drivers are the larger market cap and the larger share count. Now compared to our floats which is really equivalent to our our market cap because we don't have any strategic holders, we're actually more liquid than our large cap peers and you can see this pick up in liquidity again is much more clear on this graph in Q3 and Q4. And there's one other point that I want to mention is tangentially related to this and liquidity and volatility. We have the lowest share count in the GDX, which shows discipline with respect to equity issuance over a long history. We've talked about that during this presentation. However, that means that a small change in financial numbers can really impact our per share metrics. A $1 million change in our financial reported financials can be a one cent change in earnings. So high frequency traders will seize on this when you announce your earnings. If you beat or miss by a cent it can actually mean that you get additional volatility that as a result of that. But one million dollars I think we can all agree is de minimis for a 20 billion dollar company. So I think that that is something that we notice and with the addition of these additional shares from Sandstorm that higher share count should now help reduce that volatility somewhat because we're just dividing by a larger denominator. Peers with hundreds of millions of shares outstanding don't have the same issue but we do and it's something you should keep in mind when you see our financial results on a quarterly basis. The volatility in trading may actually be driven more by our low share share count than the results themselves. Now we believe very strongly in our business hopefully we've been able to illustrate that in over the last couple of hours. But despite all the attributes that we put forward today, we continue to trade at a discount relative to our peers. If you agree that our portfolio is well diversified, has long life with many growth catalysts, our margins are high and consistent, we have a strong balance sheet, we have cash flow and access to liquidity to be able to continue growing our business, and we have the market scale and the characteristics which make us a good addition to any equity portfolio, then hopefully you'll agree that this discount is unwarranted. So with that, I will turn it back to Bill for some closing comments before we open the floor to questions.

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

Thanks, Alistair. I sort of think about what would I like you to take away from this day and I would take you back 12 months. If we were sitting in this room 12 months ago, what criticisms would you have had about Royal Gold? And I can think of a handful of them. The concentration in the top asset, the outlook for growth, and the portfolio duration. And I can, as I stand here today, I'm confident of the following is I genuinely believe we have the most diversified gold-focused portfolio in our sector. I think our five-year guidance really provides evidence we see growth in our portfolio without making any new acquisitions. And I think our portfolio duration has improved considerably with the acquisition of assets like Plat Reef, like Mara, Consanchi, and not to mention the organic portfolio improvements we've seen with the life of mine extension at Mount Milligan and the upside potential at the still developing four-mile project. So if you combine the more balanced, the larger, the stronger portfolio enhancements we've seen in the last year and you sort of marry it with a consistent strategy, a consistent approach to financing new acquisitions on a non-dilutive basis and our consistent focus on increasing returns to shareholders through higher annual dividends, I really think you do have a compelling and undervalued opportunity in the precious metal space. So with that, I want to thank the Royal Gold Team here for their efforts and contributions. I'd also like to thank the team more broadly. In a company like ours, this kind of effort touches every department, touches every person, and certainly appreciate the effort. And I'd like to thank all of you, the investors and the analysts, that allocated a couple hours of your time to listen to our story, and I certainly appreciate it. So, Alistair, with that, I think we're ready for some Q&A.

Speaker 1

All right.

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

So we'll invite the Royal Gold Management to come and sit on one of these little tuffets and we'll open the floor up to questions. I think what we'll do is we will take questions from the floor first. We have a few analysts who have dialed in by phone, and we also have a webcast. So we've already been starting to get a few questions coming in through the webcast. While we're asking questions from within the room, please use the microphones. We have a couple of microphones on either side, just so everybody on the webcast could hear the questions that are being asked. Howie. Hi, Howie. First one. Can you hear me? I actually have a handful.

Howie, Analyst

I actually have a handful. Are you entitled to any of that now that waste is going to be processed?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

Is it on? Okay, there we go. Sorry. I would say it's very much dependent on the contract itself, but I will use the stream contracts as an example. Our stream contracts actually specifically say if you reprocess material, any metal that is recovered, say it's a gold stream, any gold that is recovered is subject to our interest.

Howie, Analyst

So is that an increment or is that part of the original, let's say, 10,000 ounces a year?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

That would be incremental. It would be. Yeah. Yeah. And we actually have an example of it at Zavantina where there was material that was at the site. It was actually our team was on site and said, hey, you know, have you ever assayed that? Have you ever thought about selling the concentrate? And so what was just sitting there is now being sold, and we're getting that is subject to our stream.

Howie, Analyst

And from what you can guess, are these plentiful?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

I think it's a little early to start figuring out, you know, if material is in a tailing storage facility, could you actually extract it and reprocess it? I think that would need to be studied more. I think the, you know, the gold price where it is, to me, is relatively new.

Howie, Analyst

All right. The next one. Are your dividends payable as part of earnings or cash flow? I forget.

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

It's just a dollar. It's a dollar per share.

Howie, Analyst

But in your mind, do you say it's going to be a certain percentage of earnings or percentage of cash inflow?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

Yeah, we don't. I mean, it's obviously it's cash flow.

Howie, Analyst

Okay. Next, are you seeing more countries saying we want a higher royalty? There have been a few. Eventually, there should be more, maybe even in the United States. Are you starting to see that?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

I think I just saw it out of Ghana. And I would expect with the gold price where it is that countries are looking around for revenue generating opportunities. And usually when the gold price goes up you tend to see gold producing countries say I want a bigger

Howie, Analyst

share of that. Even Trump may say one day, hey, we helped you, we need 3% in our five. Somebody will come here. I would expect to see that. And the final is a very broad question. I think the Supreme Court of BC or the National Court of Canada ruled that the Indians have a right to properties. And that would mean if I remember that it's the Supreme Court of Canada rather than a provincial Supreme Court, every house, every mine, every tree, every apartment building, every warehouse, every factory, everything is entitled to transfer to ownership to the Indians. Do I understand that correctly? Is that crazy?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

I'm not an expert in First Nations law, so I might ask somebody from Canada if they wish to comment.

Jason Hines, Analyst — Other

I would wish not to comment. I think that made some headlines. There was a specific one around some properties in Richmond that made some headlines, but I think the government has... All of Vancouver. ...quickly backtracked on that, so it's not a particular concern of mine as a homeowner in Vancouver right now.

Howie, Analyst

You said you are concerned or not yet?

Jason Hines, Analyst — Other

Not a concern of mine as a homeowner in Vancouver.

Howie, Analyst

All right, thanks.

Cosmos, Analyst — CIBC

Thanks. It's Cosmos here from CIBC. Thanks, Bill and team. Maybe first question is on your five-year outlook, Bill. I know it took you a lot of effort to put out your five-year outlook, but I have to ask a few questions here. Simple one. Could you put some parameters around your five-year outlook? look? Is it average? Are you trying to get to it in five years' time? What does that number represent?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

Well, we've given a range, and so what the range represents, if you look to the midpoint, that is our current expectation in terms of GEOs for that particular year. If I'm understanding your question.

Cosmos, Analyst — CIBC

Like in five years' time, you want to get to that range, or is it within, like, next year?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

It's not so much we want to get there as we look at the portfolio we currently have. It looks like the portfolio will produce those GEOs in 2030. But the only comment I think Martin gave the caveat, that is the sum of operator guidance translated into our GEOs. there isn't any effort to sort of sensitize or make certain adjustments to what the operators are saying.

Cosmos, Analyst — CIBC

Okay, so in year 2030. Maybe a question on Hot Madden. As we know, SSR Mining is going through a strategic review of Hot Madden. And as you mentioned, you know, ultimately you want to change the structure to better align with what Royal Gold does. So, you know, SSR mining's strategic review, does that impact timing of that potential conversion in any way? Anything that I can share with us? Or does that impact any current negotiations you might already have with counterparties at this point in time?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

Yeah, I think what has happened with SSR in Turkey, especially with Cherpler the sale to Cengiz has it just changed the dynamic and if you look at what they're saying they're saying we're going to be an America's focused mining company and you look at the share price and where it moved when they said that I think it's fair to say that the the where SSR is now with the project is probably going to delay what we might be able to achieve and it might change what we're able to achieve. I just think it's going to take a little longer until we sort of get through their strategic review of what they want to do.

Cosmos, Analyst — CIBC

Great and then maybe one last question. In Martin's 80 pages he kind of touched on a number of Sandstorm assets. So if I were to look at how Sandstorm looked at those assets previously compared to how World Gold looks at it, anything you want to point out. As you talked about, for example, Mara, that seems to be progressing earlier and faster than you had expected. You also talked about Platte Reef, but anything that surprised you in terms of how Sandstorm looked at it? And, you know, this is your first chance as Royal Gold to talk about some of these assets. Any assets that you want to point to that kind of surprised

Martin Raffield, Analyst — Other

do you? Yeah, I don't think that we found any major surprises that we have, we would change anything in a major way. Obviously, we, you know, we go back and look at it in our process from a technical perspective, we look at each of those opportunities, and then we make our call on when we think they're going to happen, when we think things are going to ramp up, what sort of technical challenges we have. But nothing stands out to me as, wow, that was very different from what Sandstorm Horizon said in terms of our view of it.

Derek, Analyst

Derek, Mattiti Cowan. In terms of transactions, you mentioned transactions are trending larger. So scale matters. Some of your peers are now talking about the potential for multiple billion dollar deals over the next three to five years as some of these mega base metal projects come into development. How does that factor into what Royal Gold can do, will do, given your size and

Dan Breeze, Analyst — Other

strategy going forward? Yeah, I think you're referring to the BHP-Weekon deal that we saw recently. I think our criteria, it's still the same. We're going to still apply the same approach in terms of how we look at these opportunities. We're working on the liquidity right now to rebuild that, as Paul talked about. So it'll be a function of how a sizable asset would fit in the portfolio, what's the concentration risk, how can we fund it, all those things will apply. But we're certainly open to looking at larger transactions as a theme. Does that answer your question, is that? It does. I guess

Derek, Analyst

how does that factor into, you know, keeping optionality in terms of the balance sheet as well, given the size of where you guys are. If there is a two or dollar transaction out there that is attractive to you yeah yeah you know

Paul Libner, CFO

Derek you know I and I refer back to the Wheaton transaction as well and you know with their kind of capital tower of what they use I think you would you would find something similar here with with Royal Gold yeah we have eight hundred million dollars available today on the revolver again looking to have that repaid by the end of this calendar year potentially and then you know still also strong cash flowing you know beyond that but you know looking at our banking group who were you know selves included that you know good partnerships with and you know if we needed to bridge on you know some term loan type financings or something similar that I think those options would certainly be on the table.

Derek, Analyst

Let me ask you an asset question on Comacao. You mentioned the potential for energy to look at additional expansion to 200,000 tons copper per year. What What would that mean in terms of silver deliveries, in terms of your AOI?

Martin Raffield, Analyst — Other

Look, it's very early stages at the moment. They have just announced that they are thinking about moving to that or looking at that sort of level. Obviously, it would be an increase, but I wouldn't want to put a specific number on that. I mean, we've said that with the latest expansion, there's a 35% increase. So beyond that 130 to 200, you know, I wouldn't ratio it up, But it's going to be an increase, and it's going to be relatively significant. It is not. Not a further increase up to 200, no.

Saik O'Heele, Analyst — H.C. Wainwright

Hey, Bill and team. It's Saik O'Heele from H.C. Wainwright. Thanks for having us. Very comprehensive. We've got a good part of your team sitting up on stage here today, and I assume between everyone here you talk to dozens of investors, operators, stakeholders every day. In your opinion, given that we have a wide range of the team here, what are the three assets of yours that are most misunderstood or even misvalued by the market? Especially given Martin's comments in one of his four or five slides, that there is two million meters of drilling per year.

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

To me, the one asset that I think the market doesn't really fully, fully appreciate might be Mount Milligan. And we try very, very hard to say, you know, life of mine extension, that's great. Our top asset now has two decades of mine life. But when we just casually reference the fact that they're building a tailing storage facility that's going to accommodate material well beyond that, and if you listen to Paul Tamari talk about that asset, he's talking decades beyond the two decades. And I just don't think that's in anybody's estimation right now. I think the other asset that everybody underestimates a little bit, because there just isn't enough information right now, is how big could 4 Mile get? I think in your mind, you kind of think, oh, it's one of the greatest exploration stories ever. But do we really understand the potential, the decades of potential production that's out there? Beyond that, I'll just pick two smaller ones. because WASA has been owned by Shifung for the last few years, there just isn't a lot of sort of airplay for the asset. You know, there aren't quarterly results. There was a technical report that was issued, I think at this point, it's a couple years old, that showed the potential for that asset to go to 2049. Nobody really knows that, unless you've seen that report. Nobody really knows that. And I think the other one that always gets underestimated is Aventina and you go back to 21 when we made that investment and people looked at us and said, what are you doing? It's only got a five-year mine life. And I like to say the mine life when we made the investment ended in 2026, the technical report they put out at the end of last year, the first year was 2026 and the last year was 2032. And we just see the potential for that. So that to me, I don't know, anybody else wants chime in on underestimated assets in the portfolio. Yeah, I'll say one more, and it

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

goes back to, I mean you mentioned Four Mile at Cortez, but I think the rest of Cortez is not that well understood within our portfolio, which is one of the reasons why we spent so much time on it today. We have, Cortez is a complex, I mean there are multiple operating assets there, there's a lot of exploration potential, there's a lot of future potential there, and I just don't, I still don't think the market really has a good understanding of what Cortez could be and what our exposure is. We've got a lot of material that we've put out talking about the different royalties that cover certain areas but unfortunately Barrick doesn't break down Cortez into the bits and pieces that really provide the operating backup to be able to understand where the ounces are coming from and I think that's still something that we struggle with is we get a lot of questions not just from investors but from analysts who follow Barrick and Royal Gold you know how should I think about this how should I model it better to be able to capture this value.

Saik O'Heele, Analyst — H.C. Wainwright

It sure sounds like overall the feedback is longevity and growth, though. I mean, that seems to be the resounding theme from everything that was just answered. I've asked somewhat similar questions to other companies and other settings before, and I just can't help myself to do it again today. You're 53% exposed to North America. Taking out today's market action, the world has gotten substantially more geopolitically unsafe over the last few quarters. what has that done to your investment thesis again we got the whole team sitting here to your investment theories theses related to assignable discount rates model geopolitical risk factors and also for willingness of where you're you know looking to deploy capital yeah look if we could do every transaction in

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

the US Canada and Australia I'd love to we have to go where the opportunities are and I don't think anything's really changed the the thesis because when we think about political risk I mean we you look at we just got our money back at Pueblo Viejo and Acoyo in the last year that was 10 years and so when we look at political risk we can't just look at who's in power at that particular point in time who favors the mining industry because it's going to change and it's probably going to change multiple times over the life of the investment. So as we talked about is understand how important is the industry within the country? How important is it to employment? How important is it to export earnings? Because I think the one conclusion you can draw from Cobre at Panama is there's no mining industry in Panama. They suddenly got in trouble and there weren't three different companies standing there going to the government saying you're going to ruin the mining industry because there wasn't one. it's not a foolproof way of doing political risk but to us it's that it's one that has I think been shown to work over over decades. Thank you, Kerry

Kerry McCurry, Analyst — Ken Corriginuity

McCurry, Ken Corriginuity. Just maybe back on Hod Madden have since you've owned your JV interest have you had some preliminary discussions with potential counterparties and or is you know should we expect something to happen this year or is it too soon to say?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

I'd like to see something happen this year, to be fair. The approach we have taken is the best, the easiest way to do it is with the partners. And obviously that approach, we've had a left turn with SSR on doing that, but that doesn't mean we've sort of just walked away from that approach. We certainly have had other companies reach out, But I would say that would be sort of plan B. If we just can't reach a transaction with the partners, then, you know, we may run a process. We may bring other people, invite people to bid, but we're not there.

Kerry McCurry, Analyst — Ken Corriginuity

And then maybe just on the 2026 guidance, on your page 34, you showed $365,410. Just wondering how much of those would be from the Sandstorm assets, if you have the number.

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

Not off the top of our head.

Jason Hines, Analyst — Other

It's just one portfolio now.

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

So if there are no further questions at the moment, anyway, from the floor, we're happy to take any questions over the phone.

Operator

And we have a question from the phone lines. Our first question comes from the line of Tanya Nyakaskonek from Scotiabank. Your question, please.

Tanya Nyakaskonek, Analyst — Scotiabank

Oh, great. Is that me? Thank you very much for taking my questions. And, Bill, thank you very much for providing the five-year guidance. Really helpful to see directionally where the company is going. So thank you for that. Can I come back just to maybe the – I'll start with the environment out there. And thank you for the slides showing, you know, that the deal size is getting bigger. And it looks like the concentration is really in the hands of three companies. I always ask on conference calls, you know, what size are you seeing out there? And it's usually that 100 to 300 million, maybe it goes up to 500 million. Should I be thinking now that this environment for you is in excess of 500 million in terms of what you're seeing out there and your ability to do and take you over a billion very easily? Should I be thinking about it that way?

Dan Breeze, Analyst — Other

Dinner, Jason. hi hi tanya it's dan breeze here um look i think i think the range that we always give you still applies and maybe it's moved up a little bit more we always say 100 to 300 maybe it's 200 to 400. we certainly see opportunities now in the 500 million dollar even plus range but uh they're They're not very plentiful, I think that's the way to say it. I think the bulk of them are still in the sub-$500 million range. Is your question, again, more around liquidity in terms of how we would fund a large deal?

Tanya Nyakaskonek, Analyst — Scotiabank

Like, you know, if you're going to pay off $600 million by the end of the year, that's $1.4 billion available, plus cash flow. So I would assume you could do over a billion, you know, maybe. I'm assuming that's correct?

Dan Breeze, Analyst — Other

Yeah, that's for Polar, yeah.

Tanya Nyakaskonek, Analyst — Scotiabank

Yeah, okay. And maybe we were talking about asset concentration in terms of your portfolio when you're doing, looking at these deals. I mean, obviously, you know, I think there's opportunities in doubling down in some of the districts that you're already in. How do you think about it from an operator concentration?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

Well, I actually, I quite like our operator concentration. I mean, you think about, you know, Barrick, having Barrick and Newmont, and then the Nevada Goldmines joint venture, Antamena, run by, you know, major copper companies, Mara being built by Glencore, Platte Reef, Ivanhoe Mines. I, you know, I don't worry too much about, you know, having too much, say, Barrick exposure or Newmont exposure, and I couldn't see us getting into a situation where we had a very large concentration with a junior operating company. I just don't see us making a big enough investment with a company of that size to where you are really, you're running junior company risk, probably have a thinner management team, and probably don't have the same access

Tanya Nyakaskonek, Analyst — Scotiabank

to capital if things go wrong and then thank you for that and and maybe if i could just uh shift to my second question um you know we've talked about this s p 500 we've talked about and alice you know it went through the slide showing it's not really material um where are we on that

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

s&p 500 potential listing yeah so thanks tanya i'll take that i mean we we satisfy all of the requirements except for market cap and just recently over the past three or four weeks we've actually not done that well just with the markets that they've come down so that 22.7 billion threshold is still the threshold it may come down but we are trading a little bit below that right now, but all of the other attributes we meet. Now, there is a subjective component to inclusion in the S&P 500. There's an index inclusion committee that meets and they decide what's coming out of the S&P 500 index and what's going in. And they will make decisions based on what they think the general market should, how the index should reflect the general market. So because we meet all the criteria, if our market cap got above 22.7 again, it doesn't necessarily mean that we're going to get included. But we think we meet all the criteria. So we'll wait and see. We'll find out when you do. There's no heads up given to companies when they're added to the index. It's a surprise to us as it is the rest of the market. So we'll just have to wait and see. i think it was very positive though that we were included in the bloomberg 500 because that selection criteria that subjectivity is not part of that same inclusion so we clearly we're one of the largest companies in the u.s one of the top 500 because we're in the bloomberg 500 so we'll

Tanya Nyakaskonek, Analyst — Scotiabank

have to wait and see about the s p 500. yeah no i asked that because you know i've listened to you talk about and you can see the valuation difference between yourselves um you know the larger two companies and yourself and and i think bill talked about you know being in the room last year what three things you know um that he had some pushback on and sort of resolve now so my question to you is this you know do you think it's that the market misunderstands your story or is it do you think the shareholder base being different from the others is is the issue or combination or maybe the answer or the question is why do you think you traded at this

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

camp well i think you know i think if you if you go back to a year ago we were a much different company much smaller and we were a unique company in the u.s marketplace maybe we're a little bit too small to be in the u.s marketplace to get that real attention but with what we did last year we've now vaulted ourselves to a position where we shouldn't be forgotten anymore our size is big enough that we should be relevant in this marketplace. So the onus is really on us to make sure that people understand what's in the portfolio. Where's the growth? What are the assets that underpin the portfolio? Where are the risks in the portfolio? So it's around making sure people understand the diversification of the portfolio to address those questions, the growth that's in the portfolio. So that's why we're doing today. This investment day was really focused on making sure people understand the long-term potential within this business so hopefully it's not going to happen in one day i don't think we'll see a re-rate in one day but what we would like to see is people start looking at us differently as a large cap company and probably the biggest capital market in the world saying okay this company has all the attributes that i need to invest in it and so that will be a re-rating that occurs over time thank you for taking my questions

Operator

thank you thank you and our next question from the phone lines comes from the line of josh

Josh Wolfson, Analyst — RBC

wolfson from rbc your question please yeah thank you very much i'll i'll second the accolades on the guidance uh five year as well as the just additional disclosures very much appreciated on our end um i had two questions uh the first one is just for constancy uh you know when that deal structure there were two buy-downs, you know, this is a larger asset. You know, the first question is just wondering how are you thinking about long-term guidance and the decisions that could be made by the operator there and how that affects your... So I think that I think our assumption is that first

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

quantum will probably achieve the ability to buy down at the first level. But we don't we don't have the second one in there, right? Yeah. So it's just the

Josh Wolfson, Analyst — RBC

first buy-down that we assumed between now and 2030. And then the second question is across all the various slides on optionality, one of the assets that was not discussed is Holt. I know the company doesn't talk about this much given the current circumstances. I was recalculating the royalty rate on that asset. I think it's above 50% at current gold prices which might not be realistic but um you know the operator there has uh outlined a plan to review the project maybe uh consider spending some additional capital to restart the the plants um you know what's yeah

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

josh i mean we i i think we probably agree with you there there probably is a different solution uh at holt um it's just it's a little early to to even even talk about it um uh but you know certainly at these prices it's a very different it's a very different gold price environment than it was when Holt closed a number of years ago. Thank you

Operator

very much. I'm not showing any further questions from the phone lines at this

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

time. Okay thank you we do have a few that have come in through the webcast so Kim if you're okay reading those please. Do you have an approximate target

Kim, Analyst — Other

allocation for silver within the portfolio or are you largely agnostic between silver and gold? How do you view copper and other traditional base metals within the portfolio?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

Look, silver's in the box. We don't have a target allocation for silver. If we happen to increase silver relative to gold because we made a couple of investments that we really like, that's fine. I always say if you give us five projects, three of them are gold, one's silver, one's copper, we'd probably look at them in that priority because we're a gold company, And that's what we're sort of selling to shareholders. Copper, as we have said, those are one-off situations. Someone calls us up, says, I've got this royalty. Would you have an interest? And if we like the asset, we might bid for it. But when Dan and Jason and the business development team are out there marketing ideas, we're not out there marketing copper streams, copper royalties, or any other base metal.

Kim, Analyst — Other

what are your plans regarding the entree equity investment we're going to hold that for i think

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

we're going to hold it for for a little while we we do think there are perhaps some corporate developments within entree relative to the government of mongolia that you know maybe we want to sort of hang around and and see what happens uh there before we we look to dispose of the shares, but just understand it's still non-core. It's still not something that we really want to hold on to. Certainly, in our mind, not a company we want to consolidate in any way. So I think we'll eventually sell it. I just don't know when.

Kim, Analyst — Other

What percentage of NAV would KSM represent if it was finally approved and constructed? Would it be one of Royal Gold's top 10 assets?

Martin Raffield, Analyst — Other

I'm not going to try and answer in terms of NAV, but I would say if it were constructed and operating today that it would be one of our top ten. It's debatable whether it would be a principal property for us. It would be an important property from a GEO production rate over a long period of time.

Kim, Analyst — Other

Under what conditions would the company consider share buybacks?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

Well, I think Paul went through the capital allocation here. First and foremost, asset acquisitions. We think that's the best way to create shareholder value. If we have debt outstanding, clearly pay down the debt. That's where we sit today. Third is the annual dividend increase. You know, if we got to a point where we had what we consider excess liquidity, and that's a very tough concept to get your mind around when you have multibillion-dollar potential transactions out there, I think you would look at share buybacks, look at special dividends, but it's also based on our valuation. You know, I think when we were trading at the lows of lows last fall, and you looked at some of the transactions that were out there, and they were trading at, you know, 1.7 times, 1.8 times NEV, and our shares were trading at 1.4. That's a situation where you really got to take a step back and say, should we actually be making the investment in the assets we know better than the new investments at a higher premium. So I think that kind of thought process would go on internally. But so there's no hard condition that says if we hit this point on a valuation basis, we're going to buy back shares.

Kim, Analyst — Other

Please discuss the subtleties between the terms royalty and streams and which holds more advantageous.

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

who hasn't talked here Jason can

Jason Hines, Analyst — Other

I think Dan mentioned we're a bit agnostic, we look at things from a net revenue perspective the big differences are what the contracts how the contracts are written what they're used for, streams are often more advantageous from a tax perspective for the operator to write because they're generally not a taxable disposition if you write a new royalty on an existing mine, it's usually a sale of a capital asset and you've got to pay your capital gains tax on it right up front. There's subtleties around the tax perspective where we sit as well. And royalties, it depends on what jurisdiction you're in. If you're in British Columbia, Ontario, most of Canada, Nevada, places like that where royalties are registered on title with mines, that establishes a very, very strong sense of security around that. Whereas with streams, it's more of a contract and you need to write in your security into that contract. And if there's problems, you've got to hope that it survives the proceedings that might take place, that might come by to challenge it. So, obviously, in writing things like that,

Kim, Analyst — Other

we're a lot more careful. With that, and that question flows into the next one well, how do we think about security and parent guarantees when we're doing new stream transactions?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

Want me to take it? Well, you know, I think Dan touched on it, is we look at term sheets as a blank canvas every time we're putting a bid out. We don't come at this with boxes that need to be ticked. And there are ways to structure investments at an operating company without a parent guarantee. All you have to do is control the amount of money that can go up to the parent and outside of your recourse. And First Quantum's a great example. We spent quite a bit of time looking at First Quantum as a corporate credit to say, okay, if it's unsecured, you know, what is the financial strength of this company? And what we found is even if you never let Cobre Panama open up again, even if you don't let them refinance bonds that are maturing, the company is able to actually repay that debt and become a better credit. Therefore, you don't really need to have the security at that point in time. It makes you feel good, it makes you feel good to say, I got security and I have apparent guarantee. But my experience in the mining industry is if you get to that point where there's a bankruptcy and you're in a workout, you're not getting 80 cents on the dollar or 90 cents on the dollar. I mean, the top guys are probably going to get 40 cents on the dollar. But mining projects that go wrong tend to go wrong. They go horribly wrong. So I would just say we take, I think, a unique situation. I actually heard a competitor say, you know, we won't do a deal unless we have security. I was like, great, that leaves the best credits out there for us. You know, please keep doing that. But to us, every situation is different, and I just caution people not to say parent guarantee security, that's a good structure because it may not be what you need, and it may not protect you when things go wrong.

Kim, Analyst — Other

Now that gold prices are as high as they are, Does it become more risky as there are more firms willing to take on risks? How do you assess the good deals or the more questionable ones? How many deals do you look at and reject in a year?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

Dan, do you want to take the last part first?

Dan Breeze, Analyst — Other

Sure, Kim. I think we touched on this a little bit in the presentation. We're looking at upwards, as I mentioned, upwards of 80, 90, 100 opportunities a year. sometimes we look at them very quickly and we discard them very quickly so it's not like we spend a lot of time on on some of them but that's generally how we how we go about assessing things as we run it through our screen and we decide if it's something we want to spend time on from a commercial and technical perspective then we make the decision to move forward you know I just think you

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

know protecting yourselves against a reduction in the gold price I mean you know so many of us have been around the industry for so long right you see these projects that they didn't work at $2,500 they didn't work at $3,000 an ounce they're now on their fourth name it's about finding the quality assets because I think you can't you can't make investments just by thinking the gold price is going to go up you've got a one of the questions I always ask the team is what's the break-even price on our investment what's the impairment price where is does the does the mine exist in the fourth quartile or is it in the first three quartiles because the first the fourth quartile is going to be the first to the first to go if the gold price does go down so we cut we try to go into these investments with our eyes open as to what happens if the gold

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

price falls. If. All right so I think we've exhausted the questions on the webcast if there are no further questions by phone i'll pause for a moment just to double check we

Operator

have a question from the phone lines oh and our question comes from the line of brian mcarthur

Brian MacArthur, Analyst — Raymond James

from raymond james oh good afternoon sorry most of my questions been answered but can you just comment on with the situation that ssr you've talked about it a little bit whether you expect to be putting money in this year as a capital call under your joint venture agreement

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

Brian, we don't know what that number is, as you can imagine, or you would have read SSR was silent on the spending for this year when they announced the strategic review of the project. Obviously, there's still activity going on in the site. It's not development, but we will continue to contribute 30% of those costs until we get to a resolution. and I just hope at some point this year we'll be able to give people sort of a better assessment as to what timeline that project is on. I just can't answer that question right now.

Brian MacArthur, Analyst — Raymond James

Maybe if I could just ask one other one. There's been a little more discussion about some deals being done in Australia now. Are you starting to see more opportunities there from both the royalty and the streaming financing perspective?

Dan Breeze, Analyst — Other

Hi, Brian. It's Dan here. I think we are. Alistair and I were through Australia about a year ago. We were doing some IR marketing and BD marketing, and we sensed back then that there was a subtle change in the market, that operators, which traditionally have not really liked our product, were warming up to it. And I think the deal that Franco announced recently feels like that's really going to help open up the market a bit more over there. So I think in general, we have been seeing more opportunities in Australia, generally speaking, over the last, say, 12 or 18 months.

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

Thank you, Brian. Operator, any more questions from the phone line?

Operator

Not showing any further questions at this time.

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

Great, thank you. Any more questions from anybody who's in the audience? Cosmos, you want to follow up with a three-parter or just one-parter? Good, thanks.

Cosmos, Analyst — CIBC

Thanks. Can I ask about Four Mile? I guess in addition to your GSR, we've now found out that there's an additional MPI. As Dan mentioned, you look at these royalties from your perspective, also the operator's perspective. So from the operator's perspective, does that change the economics in any way? And then part two is, you know, is an MPI of interest to you? Something like this, would that be of interest to you? And how should we view MPIs at this point in time, given the rising gold price environment?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

MPIs are always tough. There's so many assumptions. You have to figure out what is actually deductible. deductible. You probably have to build inflation in. You know, I won't comment specifically on any one opportunity, but I would just say it's just harder to value than an NSR. But I don't think I fully understood the first part of your question. I wouldn't know how Barrick would be looking at the NPI and how it might influence, if that's what you were

Cosmos, Analyst — CIBC

asking. As Dan mentioned, you look at it from your perspective, their perspective. So any concerns that this could impact, you know, your investment, your GSR in any way?

Bill Heissenbuttel, CEO

No, I mean, our royalty contract would not take into consideration. I don't think it would take into consideration that particular royalty.

Jason Hines, Analyst — Other

I think I know what you're getting at. Does that raise the cost? Does all this royalty burden reduce the mine plan because of the profitability from Bear's perspective? I think it's pretty early days on Formal. they've got a PEA. I think everybody agrees it's going to be very, likely very profitable. It's got the benefit of all the infrastructure at the Cortez complex, so we're not particularly concerned that this is one that's going to weigh on development decisions. Does it weigh on decisions around the margin about how much tonage you do and what the mine plan looks like? Possibly, but I don't think we're going to see that flowing through to our NPI in any material way on an asset of this quality.

Cosmos, Analyst — CIBC

Great. See, Bill, the Canadian understands me, so I guess I'm speaking Canadian. I'm just going to keep my mouth shut. One last question. Alistair, as you mentioned S&P 500. I'm seeing that right now, Royal Gold's in the S&P 400. Top 10 now in terms of size. Does that impact any kind of decision that you could move into the S&P 500 in any way? Well, I think membership of the 400 is helpful

Alistair Baker, Head of Investor Relations

if you've been there for a period of time and you're growing and you've got an established business, and you've got earnings, and you've got all the good things that come with growing a business over time. So I think it is helpful on the margin, but we really don't have any window into what the Index Inclusion Committee looks at and how they view these things. So I can't really answer that. It would be speculation on our part, I think. Any further questions? Okay, well, thanks very much, everybody. Really appreciate you attending and all the questions we got on the webcast on the phone. We do look forward to giving you updates obviously as we go throughout the year and through the coming years. For those in the room please do join us for the bell ringing ceremony. We'll be heading down there in about 20 minutes and there are cocktails available as well. So two reasons to stick around. Thanks very much.