Logotype for African Rainbow Minerals Limited

African Rainbow Minerals (ARI) H1 2026 earnings summary

Event summary combining transcript, slides, and related documents.

Logotype for African Rainbow Minerals Limited

H1 2026 earnings summary

13 May, 2026

Executive summary

  • Headline earnings for the six months ended 31 December 2025 increased by 10% to R1,669 million, with basic earnings up 69% to R2,353 million, driven by higher PGM prices and a gain on the Nkomati acquisition; interim dividend declared at R5.00 per share.

  • Net cash position improved to R8,464 million at 31 December 2025 from R6,609 million a year earlier, with no debt at ARM Ferrous.

  • Safety performance improved significantly, with zero fatalities and lower LTIFR and TRIFR rates.

  • Major strategic transactions included the closure of Cato Ridge Works, disposal of Sakura Ferroalloys, and acquisition of full ownership of Nkomati Mine.

Financial highlights

  • Segmental headline earnings: ARM Platinum swung to R704 million profit (>200% increase), ARM Ferrous declined 34% to R1,236 million, and ARM Coal posted a R271 million loss (>200% decrease).

  • Dividends received from Assmang decreased 4% to R2.4 billion, while Harmony dividends rose 66% to R116 million.

  • EBITDA margins improved for PGMs (from -14% to 8%) and iron ore (from 28% to 36%), but declined for manganese alloys and coal.

  • Revenue for the period was R7,857 million, with gross profit of R2,620 million and EBITDA of R4,503 million.

  • Headline earnings per share rose to 866 cents; basic earnings per share increased to 1,220 cents.

Segment performance

  • Domestic coal sales at GGV declined 15% year-over-year, PCB down 3%, with revised lower guidance for local sales volumes due to reduced Eskom demand; some coal diverted to export markets at better prices.

  • ARM Platinum: Two Rivers and Modikwa both saw lower PGM production (down 2% and 3% respectively), but headline earnings increased by over 200% each, driven by higher PGM prices.

  • ARM Ferrous: Iron ore sales volumes fell 14% due to Beeshoek Mine ceasing sales to AMSA; Khumani Mine's unit cash costs rose 11%.

  • Nkomati chrome plant generates ZAR 20–25 million/month revenue, subsidizing care and maintenance; chrome production to peak at 11,000 tons/month by April, with annual profit expected at ZAR 100 million from 500,000 tons.

  • Beeshoek signed a 1.2 million ton iron ore contract over 12 months at 100,000 tons/month, starting February, to clear stockpiles at a lower price (ZAR 800/ton vs previous ZAR 1,221/ton).

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