Mining M&A is becoming a prominent factor in the equity market. Investors who once crowded into high-growth technology stocks are now pouring money into mining and metals, recognizing the importance of raw materials powering AI, electrification, and defense infrastructure.

In contrast to high-flying tech, mining M&A isn’t optional. Large operators are constantly on the lookout, as they’re racing against resource depletion. Even the best mines eventually run out, and multi-billion-dollar capex guarantees expansions, often through relevant M&A.

Capital flows show the magnitude of investors’ interest. Assets under management in mining exchange-traded funds surged to $87.4 billion by the end of the first quarter of 2026, more than doubling from $37 billion a year earlier. It is a big turnaround, given that funds suffered outflows in early 2025 following U.S. tariff uncertainty.

Fund managers, like BlackRock’s Evy Hambro, call it “the early stages of a commodity supercycle.”

“The material intensity of GDP is rising,” Hambro said for Reuters, pointing to investments in infrastructure. AI data centers, electrical grids, electric vehicles, and defense systems all require enormous quantities of copper, aluminum, steel, and rare earth minerals.

Mastering the Repeatable Playbook

The capital surge is fueling an aggressive wave of mining mergers and acquisitions. According to White & Case, mining M&A transactions reached $21.6 billion in the first quarter of 2026, up sharply from $16.1 billion a year earlier.

Instead of pursuing risky greenfield developments in remote regions, miners rely on acquisitions and partnerships to secure growth. Large operators like Agnico Eagle Mines Limited (NYSE:AEM) acquire entire districts, once junior explorers next door define mineral resources and derisk.

That strategy is disciplined M&A, as Bain & Company notes, required to build “repeatable success” rather than risk speculative expansions.

Bain describes M&A as an “underdeveloped muscle” for many miners, but one that is rapidly becoming essential as ore bodies become harder and more expensive to develop.

Such an approach favors Agnico’s district model – where a large operator builds a strong infrastructure base in a promising region. Then, as it expands, it acquires de-risked satellite resources to secure decades of production and pay the capex many times over.

Supply-chain security has become another major driver of dealmaking. White & Case and Mining Technology both note that governments and corporations are prioritizing reliable access to critical minerals amid geopolitical fragmentation.

For the U.S., resources in Canada and Latin America are in focus due to their proximity, potential, and mining-friendly policies.

“Latin America is likely to be a highly active region, given the number and range of exploration and development projects within active mining jurisdictions,” Brian Miller, CEO of Astra Exploration Inc. (OTCQB:ATEPF), told Benzinga.

“The high-quality pre-production assets are likely to appreciate drastically in value as M&A activity increases,” he added.

The Industrial Tilt and the Gold IPO Freeze

Investor flows also reveal a changing hierarchy within the commodities sector. While gold remains historically strong, industrial metals are increasingly attracting the spotlight. Copper funds drew fresh inflows in March even as investors took profits from gold miners after a record surge in January.

The preference for industrial metals reflects expectations of long-term shortages. Bain projects structural deficits in several transition minerals by 2035, including copper, lithium, and nickel.

Copper, in particular, is viewed as indispensable for AI infrastructure, renewable energy systems, and defense manufacturing. For nearshoring interests, the capital might pay close attention to McEwen Inc.’s (NYSE:MUX) upcoming IPO spinoff of McEwen Copper and Lundin Mining Corp.’s (OTCPK: LNDMY) progress with the Vicuña joint venture with BHP Group Limited (NYSE:BHP).

Still, not all IPO’s are smooth sailing despite record prices. Uzbekistan has paused the IPO of Navoi Mining & Metallurgical Co.

According to Mining.com, officials fear that a public listing could dilute the substantial dividend stream flowing into state coffers. The firm is the fourth-largest global gold producer and has generated $10.8 billion in revenue last year.

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