By Adnan Adams Mohammed, Award-Winning Financial and Economic Journalist
Asante Gold Corporation (TSX.V:ASE | GSE:ASG) has delivered a blockbuster opening to the 2026 financial year, clocking a record-breaking quarterly revenue of $300.4 million.
The 111.6% surge from the previous year’s comparable quarter ($142 million) comes on the back of soaring global gold prices and a massive production ramp-up across its Ghanaian operations.
The stellar financial performance coincides with a major changing of the guard, as Campbell Baird takes the helm as Acting Chief Executive Officer following the retirement of long-time President and CEO Dave Anthony.
A Tale of Two Realities: Record Sales vs. Rising Costs
Propelled by spot gold reaching unprecedented heights, Asante realized an exceptional average gold price of $4,769 per ounce on sales of 62,996 gold-equivalent ounces for the three months ended March 31, 2026. This is a staggering increase from the $2,946 per ounce captured in the same period last year. Adjusted EBITDA skyrocketed to $102.2 million, up from $30.7 million.
However, the golden quarter was not without its operational friction. Group gold production reached 59,800 equivalent ounces averaging roughly 20,000 ounces per month marking a 50% increase over the 2025 monthly average. Yet, All-In-Sustaining-Costs (AISC) remained high at $3,886 per equivalent ounce, pinched by heavy investments, mill upgrades, and localized operational setbacks.
In his first major address since stepping into the chief executive role, Acting CEO Campbell Baird balanced optimism with a grounded view of the challenges ahead.
“The growth opportunity in front of Asante is substantial, and I look forward to driving consistency of performance into the business as we pursue the full scope of short- and long-term potential at Bibiani and Chirano,” Baird stated.
Operational Breakdown: Bibiani and Chirano
Asante’s two flagship assets in Ghana painted contrasting operational pictures for the first quarter:
● Bibiani Gold Mine: Material movement hit historic highs since acquisition, with the open-pit mining fleet finally operating at 100% planned capacity (including 115 trucks at the Main Pit). Gold production jumped sharply to 27,679 ounces, aided by a newly commissioned sulphide treatment plant that pushed gold recoveries up to 76%. However, a mid-January wall slippage on the southeast wall deferred access to high-grade ore to the latter half of the year, driving AISC up to $4,197 per ounce due to elevated waste-stripping requirements.
● Chirano Gold Mine: Powered by a freshly upgraded underground mining fleet delivered through early Q1, open-pit ore mining surged by 52.5%, heavily supported by the Aboduabo site. Despite the higher volume processed, lower grades from the Suraw and Obra underground mines meant total production held steady at 32,124 ounces. Chirano’s AISC ticked up to $3,587 per ounce due to temporary processing constraints and increased capital expenditure on the tailings storage facility.
Addressing the cost metrics and teething issues associated with the rapid equipment ramp-up, Baird noted that the company is actively course-correcting.
“While acknowledging there remains more to do to improve reliability of our production and cost performance and delivery on our growth potential these results demonstrate the initial quantum and direction of improvement,” Baird said.
Resetting the Strategy and Securing Capital
To bridge the gap between volatile performance and steady growth, Asante launched a comprehensive strategic review of its mining and processing activities in early April.
“This review is focused on resetting our operating plan to be executable and robust,” Baird explained. “While both operations have demonstrated improving production trends in recent months, the Company’s immediate priority is to transition both operations from periods of improving performance to consistent, repeatable delivery, and then to unlock further sustainable growth.”
On the financial front, the miner is actively shoring up its balance sheet. Asante closed the quarter with $62.2 million cash on hand and has engaged a senior lending group to secure an initial $50 million via an unsecured gold forward agreement to manage short-term liquidity.
Furthermore, the company has deferred $55 million in hedging liabilities to late 2026, meaning Asante now retains unlimited upside exposure to the historically strong gold market. Looking ahead, management has committed to raising an additional $100 million in debt or equity by August 31, 2026, potentially via mezzanine debt or an upcoming listing on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX).
“Early work reinforces that these assets can deliver materially stronger production than what was achieved in Q1 2026,” Baird concluded. “We will update the market on the outcomes of this review, including key expected output and cost parameters, once a revised operating plan has been finalized.”
