By Iain Gilbert
Date: Thursday 04 Jun 2026
(Sharecast News) - Analysts at RBC Capital Markets cut their target price on gold miner Endeavour Mining from 6,000p to 5,100p on Thursday, after lowering its gold price assumptions for 2026 and 2027.
RBC updated its model to reflect its latest commodity forecasts, trimming its 2026 gold estimate to $4,760 an ounce, down 17% on its prior view, and its 2027 forecast to $5,250 an ounce, down 19%. The long‑term gold price assumption was left unchanged at $4,000 an ounce.
The Canadian bank, which kept its 'outperform' rating on the stock, said rising yields, driven by geopolitical uncertainty around Iran and firmer inflation expectations, were likely to cap near‑term upside, though it still expects prices to strengthen into 2027.
RBC's revised assumptions prompted cuts of 17% to Endeavour's forecast FY25-27 underlying earnings, 26% to earnings per share, 27% to free cash flow and 6% to net asset value per share.
However, RBC said it continues to expect the shares to re‑rate, supported by a sector‑leading dividend yield and strong cost positioning in an inflationary environment.
Berenberg lowered its target price on private capital asset manager ICG from 2,800p to 2,670p on Thursday, but also argued the 'buy'-rate stock had been "unfairly caught up in sector readacross".
Berenberg noted that there was currently "a significant amount of negativity surrounding the sector", but said ICG was continuing to take share in "the right corners of this vast market", while it had also limited exposure to wealth investors unlike some of its peers and been unfairly caught up in readacross from the US - a market in which ICG has been cautious about deploying capital.
While Berenberg cut its earnings estimates on account of net balance sheet returns, it also said this was "already more than reflected" in the current price of the shares, and that an implied fee-related earnings multiple of 6.1x was "too low given the earnings growth on offer".
"There is significant negativity surrounding the sector and ICG has been unfairly caught up in the readacross. The company has no exposure to retail investors, limited exposure to high-net-worth money, and has been cautious about deploying capital in the US market," said the German bank.
"We think that an implied multiple of 6.1x for its FRE, based on our estimates and holding all else constant, is too low. Alternatively, applying 1x NAV to the balance sheet implies a P/E of only 7.4x for the asset management earnings stream, which is too cheap considering the three-year EPS CAGR of 11%."
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