Elliott Management disclosed a A$1.0 billion position in Northern Star Resources on Tuesday, making it one of the activist fund's largest mining-sector bets and the most significant external intervention in Australian gold equities in eighteen months. The New York-based fund simultaneously issued a private letter to Northern Star's board calling for a formal strategic review, according to sources familiar with the matter. Northern Star trades at a 12% discount to its net asset value despite operating 10.2 million ounces of reserves across Western Australia and Alaska.
The position represents approximately 7.8% of Northern Star's market capitalization at current exchange rates. Elliott accumulated the stake over four months through a combination of open-market purchases and structured derivative positions, regulatory filings show. Northern Star closed Monday at A$15.83 per share, valuing the company at A$12.8 billion. The miner produced 1.57 million ounces of gold in fiscal 2024 at all-in sustaining costs of $1,420 per ounce, below the $2,650 spot price for bullion as of Tuesday's London fix. Elliott declined to comment on the disclosure.
The timing matters because Northern Star sits at the center of three unresolved sector dynamics. First, Australian gold miners trade at persistent valuation gaps to North American peers—Newmont and Barrick command enterprise-value-to-reserve multiples 18-22% higher than comparable Australian producers. Second, Northern Star completed its $2.0 billion acquisition of Newmont's Australian assets in November 2023, creating integration complexity Elliott likely views as unfinished work. Third, gold's rally past $2,600 per ounce has not translated into corresponding equity re-ratings for mid-tier producers, a gap Elliott has exploited in prior metals investments. The fund's 2019 campaign at BHP resulted in the $10.8 billion petroleum assets divestiture.
Elliott's strategic review demand will focus on three probable workstreams: accelerated divestiture of non-core Alaskan assets acquired in the Newmont deal, a clean separation of Northern Star's 24% stake in De Grey Mining to unlock A$680 million in embedded value, and potential merger discussions with Evolution Mining or Regis Resources to create scale that justifies premium multiples. Northern Star's board, led by chairman Bill Beament, has historically resisted M&A overtures, but Elliott's arrival changes the calculus. Beament's own activist history—he founded Northern Star in 2010 and engineered its rise through eight acquisitions—gives Elliott both leverage and common language.
Allocators should monitor three developments over the next ninety days. Northern Star will release December quarter production results in late January; any softness in Pogo mine throughput (the Alaskan asset Elliott wants sold) strengthens the activist's case. Second, watch whether Elliott files for board representation at Northern Star's May annual meeting—the fund typically moves from private engagement to public campaign within 120 days of initial disclosure. Third, track whether Evolution Mining or Gold Road Resources, both logical merger counterparties, see unusual option activity or strategic adviser appointments. Gold Road, with its 9.9 million ounce Gruyere project, would give Northern Star the reserve life Elliott's analysis likely shows the market will pay for.
The A$1 billion stake tells you Elliott expects Northern Star to trade above A$18.50 within twelve months, a 17% premium requiring either asset sales, merger arbitrage, or both. Singer's fund does not write ten-figure checks for governance theater.