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National Bank Lifts IAMGold (IAG) PT to C$16 From C$15

National Bank Lifts IAMGold (IAG) PT to C$16 From C$15

Yahoo5 days ago
IAMGOLD Corporation (NYSE:IAG) is one of the cheap Canadian stocks to buy now. Earlier on June 24, National Bank increased its price target for IAMGold from C$15 to C$16, while maintaining an Outperform rating on the shares. This showed a positive outlook on the company's stock performance.
In Q1 2025, the company showed attributable gold production of 161,000 ounces. Cash costs were $1,459 per ounce, and all-in sustaining costs reached $1,908 per ounce. Mine site free cash flow increased to $140 million in Q1 2025, up from $46 million in Q1 2024. The company reported revenue of $477.1 million from the sale of 174,000 gold ounces.
A closeup view of a large gold mine, illustrating the company's gold properties.
IAMGold delivered 37,500 ounces under gold prepay arrangements in Q1 2025, with 25,000 ounces remaining as of April this year. The average realized gold price, which includes the impact of gold prepays, was $2,731 per ounce, rising to $2,909 per ounce when excluding this impact. Production from Cote Gold was 73,000 ounces (on a 100% basis), Westwood produced 24,000 ounces, and Essakane contributed 86,000 attributable ounces.
IAMGOLD Corporation (NYSE:IAG) is a gold producer and developer in Canada and Burkina Faso.
While we acknowledge the potential of IAG as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the .
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Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.
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Carnival Corporation &'s (NYSE:CCL) investors will be pleased with their strong 196% return over the last three years
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Carnival Corporation &'s (NYSE:CCL) investors will be pleased with their strong 196% return over the last three years

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Canada has now learned that the derisive acronym TACO — often slapped on U.S. President Donald Trump — is inaccurate and needs to be tweaked to something more like "Trump (Almost) Always Chickens Out." Despite putting decidedly lower tariffs than he'd threatened on dozens of countries around the globe and giving Mexico a 90-day reprieve from his threat to raise its tariff rate, Trump singled out Canada for an increase. While there's no way that Canada can characterize what happened as a win, there's plenty of evidence that it's not a reason for Prime Minister Mark Carney's government to panic and do something that jeopardizes what really matters for the Canadian economy: tariff-free access to the U.S. for the vast majority of exports. The key evidence backing this perspective comes in the economic number-crunching showing the actual impact of Trump's tariffs on the whole of Canada's exports to the U.S, what's called the effective tariff rate. 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