AngloGold Ashanti has reported annual gold production of 3.1 million ounces for the 2025 financial year, marking its highest recorded output to date. According to the company’s published results available on its official website at AngloGold Ashanti, performance was supported by sustained strength in bullion prices and the contribution of the Sukari mine in Egypt, acquired through the 2.48 billion dollar purchase of Centamin in 2024.
Sukari delivered approximately 500000 ounces during the year, accounting for about 16 per cent of total group production. The integration of the Egyptian asset has expanded AngloGold Ashanti’s continental footprint at a time when scale and reserve replacement remain central to long term sustainability in the gold mining sector. The transaction has reinforced Egypt’s standing within Africa’s extractive economy, reflecting the interconnectedness of North and sub Saharan African mineral production within global supply chains.
Core earnings rose by 129 per cent to 6.3 billion dollars, while headline earnings increased to 2.7 billion dollars. Shareholder returns reached a reported 1.7 billion dollars. The improvement reflects both operational adjustments and a favourable price environment. Gold traded near historic highs through much of 2025, supported by central bank purchases and geopolitical uncertainty. Market data published by the World Gold Council indicates that official sector demand remained resilient, contributing to firm pricing conditions across international markets.
Within Ghana, the Obuasi mine recorded a 20 per cent increase in output to 266000 ounces. The company attributed this improvement to ventilation upgrades, the resolution of equipment constraints experienced in the previous year, higher underground grades and processing optimisation. Obuasi remains integral to Ghana’s mining economy and continues to contribute to employment, fiscal revenues and regional development within the Ashanti region.
Total gold mineral reserves stood at 36.5 million ounces at year end. Over the past five years, the company reports that it has added 23.1 million ounces to reserves before depletion, including acquisitions. Reserve replacement remains a structural challenge for global gold producers as new discoveries become more capital intensive and technically complex. AngloGold Ashanti’s strategy has combined organic project development with targeted acquisitions across Africa in response to these constraints.
The group has guided 2026 production within a range of 2.80 million to 3.17 million ounces, signalling relative stability rather than accelerated expansion. Market capitalisation on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange has increased significantly in recent years, rising from 159 billion rand in March 2023 to approximately 900 billion rand, approaching the one trillion rand threshold. In 2023, AngloGold Ashanti shifted its primary listing to the New York Stock Exchange, citing a strategic objective to narrow valuation differentials with North American peers and broaden access to global capital.
Although the company exited South Africa in 2020 with the sale of the Mponeng mine, its operational base remains substantially anchored on the African continent. It continues to operate in Egypt, Ghana, Guinea and Tanzania, and holds a joint venture interest in the Democratic Republic of Congo managed by Barrick. Across Africa, gold mining intersects with questions of fiscal governance, environmental stewardship and community development. Elevated prices have strengthened margins across the sector, yet long term value creation remains contingent on regulatory stability, responsible resource management and equitable distribution of mining revenues.
In this context, AngloGold Ashanti’s recent performance illustrates both the opportunities and structural complexities facing African producers within a volatile global commodities market, while reflecting the growing strategic importance of African gold within the broader architecture of global finance and reserve diversification.







