Home Research Contact
Fides Polonia Capital Management · Equity Research · April 2026

KGHM Polska Miedź S.A.

Poland's National Copper & Silver Champion

KGH.WA · Warsaw Stock Exchange · ISIN: PLKGHM000017

Strong Buy — Crown Jewel of the Polish Economy
PLN 59.3B
Market
Capitalisation
PLN 36B+
Revenue
(2025)
PLN 10.3B
EBITDA
(2025)
#2
World Silver
Producer
31.79%
State Treasury
Ownership
Return to Portfolio Prologue

The Metal Beneath Poland's Feet — and at the Heart of the AI Age

Beneath the farmlands and forests of Lower Silesia lies one of the most strategically important geological formations on earth: the Legnica-Głogów Copper Belt, a deposit stretching across 416 square kilometres that contains copper, silver, gold, molybdenum, rhenium, and a suite of other industrial metals that the modern world simply cannot function without. Since 1961, KGHM Polska Miedź has been the custodian of this national inheritance — mining it, refining it, and selling it to the world's most demanding industrial customers.

At Fides Polonia, we do not invest in commodities. We invest in businesses. And KGHM, at its core, is a magnificently positioned business: Europe's largest copper producer, the world's second-largest silver producer by volume, a state-anchored company with 34,000 employees, over PLN 10 billion in annual EBITDA, and mines that have been compounding in strategic value for more than six decades. The timing of this report is not accidental. The two metals KGHM produces in greatest abundance — copper and silver — are now at the centre of the most powerful demand cycle in a generation, driven by the global artificial intelligence infrastructure build-out. The AI revolution does not merely run on microchips. It runs on copper and silver. And KGHM sits on top of both.

The Church has long recognised that the gifts of the earth are held in stewardship, not ownership — ordered to the common good of all people, not merely the enrichment of those who happen to occupy the land above them. KGHM was established as a state enterprise precisely on this principle: that the mineral wealth beneath Lower Silesia belonged to the Polish nation, and that it should be extracted and managed for the benefit of Polish workers, Polish communities, and the Polish economy. Over sixty years later, that founding principle remains embedded in its ownership structure and its 34,000-person workforce. Cf. Gaudium et Spes §69 · Catechism of the Catholic Church §2402 · On the Universal Destination of Goods

This report is written for the institutional investor seeking rigorous analysis and for the Polish family investor who has never stopped to ask why the country whose GDP grew 500% since 2000 also happens to sit on the world's most significant integrated copper and silver producing operation. Both deserve to understand the answer — and why KGHM belongs in a portfolio built on the conviction that Poland's greatest assets remain undervalued by the world.

I. Company Overview

Sixty-Four Years of Mining Poland's National Treasure

KGHM Polska Miedź S.A. — Poland's Copper and Silver Mining Company — was established on 1 May 1961 in Lubin, Lower Silesia, as a state enterprise created to develop the vast copper deposits discovered beneath the Fore-Sudetic Monocline. Its founding purpose was straightforward: to mine, smelt, and refine the extraordinary mineral wealth lying beneath Lower Silesia, and to do so in the service of the Polish nation. Over the following two decades, KGHM built four underground mines, three copper smelters and refineries, and an integrated logistics infrastructure that transformed a quiet corner of south-western Poland into the backbone of European copper supply.

In 1991, the state enterprise was converted into a joint-stock company of the State Treasury. In 1997, KGHM completed its IPO on the Warsaw Stock Exchange — one of the most significant listings in Polish capital market history. Today it is a component of the WIG30 index and one of the most internationally recognised Polish companies in the world's mining industry.

MetricFigure
Founded1 May 1961 — Lubin, Lower Silesia, Poland
HeadquartersUl. M. Skłodowskiej-Curie 48, Lubin, Lower Silesia
Warsaw Stock ExchangeKGH.WA · WIG30 component · Listed 1997
State Treasury Ownership31.79% — Polish State Treasury, largest single shareholder
Employees~34,000 worldwide — predominantly Polish
Operations9 mines in Poland, USA, Canada, Chile · 3 smelters/refineries in Poland
Revenue (2025)PLN 36 billion+
EBITDA (2025)PLN 10.3 billion (+22% year-on-year)
Net Profit (2025)PLN 3.7 billion (+28% year-on-year)
Net Debt / Adjusted EBITDA0.7× — conservatively leveraged
Copper Production (2025)710,000 tonnes payable copper
Silver Production (2025)1,347 tonnes — world #2 silver producer (World Silver Survey 2025)
Global Copper RankingTop 10 globally · Largest producer in Europe
European Copper SupplySupplies approximately 40–50% of Europe's copper demand
By-ProductsGold, molybdenum, rhenium, nickel sulphate, lead, selenium, platinum group metals
II. The Asset Base

Europe's Largest Copper Mine — and the World's Most Productive Silver Operation

The Legnica-Głogów Copper Belt in Lower Silesia is not merely a mine. It is a geological phenomenon — a stratiform copper-silver deposit of exceptional grade, continuous over more than 400 square kilometres, that has been producing at industrial scale for over sixty years without exhausting its reserves. KGHM's three Polish mine divisions — Lubin, Polkowice-Sieroszowice, and Rudna — together constitute the largest copper mining complex in Europe and rank among the most significant in the world.

The Silver Distinction: KGHM's Polish operations are ranked first in the world for silver production from a single mining complex, according to the World Silver Survey 2025. The Głogów Smelter and Refinery's Precious Metals Plant — operating since 1993 — extracts silver and gold from the copper anode slime produced during electrorefining. KGHM produced 1,347 tonnes of metallic silver in 2025, and holds second place in the global ranking of all silver producers. Silver produced at Głogów achieves a purity of 99.99% and a carbon footprint several times lower than the global average.
Lubin Mine Division
One of four original mines. Operating since 1961–68. Part of the core Legnica-Głogów Belt. Concentrator capacity 23,000 t/day. Copper, silver, and precious metals.
Polkowice-Sieroszowice
Formed by the 1996 merger of two mines built 1962–80. Concentrator 22,000 t/day. One of the world's leading silver-producing mining sites. Highly mechanised underground operations.
Rudna Mine Division
Largest single mine division. Built 1970–74. Concentrator 43,500 t/day. Located above even richer deposits discovered in the late 1960s.
Sierra Gorda, Chile
55% stake. Open-pit copper-molybdenum mine. Produced 86,800 tonnes payable copper for KGHM in 2025 (+8% YoY). 48% of Group EBITDA now generated by international assets.
Robinson Mine, Nevada USA
Open-pit copper-gold-molybdenum. Historically KGHM International's most profitable North American asset. High-grade ore blending drove +52% production growth in 2024.
New Shaft Programme
Construction of four new mine shafts underway in Poland (GG-1, GG-2, Retków, Gaworzyce). Decisions made now will extend production capacity into the 2040s. PLN 3.9 billion annual CapEx.
III. The Demand Thesis

The AI Supercycle: Why Copper and Silver Are the Metals of the Machine Age

The most significant structural demand development in the global copper and silver markets in a generation is not electric vehicles, not wind farms, and not traditional industrial growth. It is artificial intelligence — and specifically, the physical infrastructure required to run it.

A hyperscale AI data centre is, at its physical core, a copper machine. Every GPU server rack — including Nvidia's GB200 NVL72, the most powerful AI chip unit in commercial production — contains over 5,000 copper cables totalling more than 3.2 kilometres in length. The high-voltage transmission lines feeding those campuses, the busbars distributing power across server halls, the windings inside the liquid cooling pumps that prevent billions of dollars of GPU hardware from overheating — all copper. A single hyperscale AI data centre requires 30 to 40 tonnes of copper per megawatt of capacity. The global AI infrastructure build-out is now consuming copper at a pace that is measurably shifting global supply and demand balances.

Global Copper Supply Deficit — Systemic Risk Declared: S&P Global's January 2026 report, Copper in the Age of AI, identifies a projected supply shortfall of up to 10 million tonnes by 2040, with existing and planned mines meeting only approximately 70% of projected 2035 demand. The International Copper Study Group now expects a refined copper shortfall of around 150,000 tonnes in 2026 alone — reversing what had been a forecast surplus of over 200,000 tonnes. UBS forecasts deficits of 230,000 tonnes in 2025 and more than 400,000 tonnes in 2026. Copper demand from data centres is forecast to grow from 1.1 million metric tonnes in 2025 to 2.5 million metric tonnes by 2040.

Silver's role is equally critical, though less widely understood. Silver is essential in the chip packaging process: it appears in the bonding wire of high-end AI processors, in the silver-palladium multi-layer ceramic capacitors (MLCCs) that power AI server modules, in the connectors and high-performance circuit boards of every major data centre build. Demand for silver in electronics and industrial applications is forecast to remain at record highs throughout this decade, with AI hardware representing one of its fastest-growing end-use categories. KGHM, as the world's second-largest silver producer, sits directly in the path of this structural demand tailwind.

AI Data Centres
↑ 72%
Energy Transition
↑ 58%
Electric Vehicles
↑ 45%
Grid Infrastructure
↑ 38%

Indicative demand growth vectors to 2035 · Source: S&P Global, IEA, Wood Mackenzie, Fides Polonia synthesis

KGHM's response to this environment has been measured and disciplined. The company's strategic investments in four new mine shafts and expanded processing capacity in Poland are designed to grow output precisely when this demand surge reaches peak intensity in the late 2020s and 2030s — ensuring KGHM is not merely a beneficiary of the AI supercycle, but a structurally larger one as it matures.

"Copper is the great enabler of electrification — and the accelerating pace of electrification is an increasing challenge for copper supply." — Daniel Yergin, Vice Chair, S&P Global, January 2026
IV. Financial Analysis

The Numbers: Record Earnings, Fortress Balance Sheet, Growing Returns

2025 Full-Year Performance

Metric2025 ResultYear-on-Year
RevenuePLN 36 billion+Stable (currency headwinds offset volume growth)
EBITDAPLN 10.3 billion+22% year-on-year
Net ProfitPLN 3.7 billion+28% year-on-year
International Asset EBITDA Share48%Foreign assets financially independent for first time
Copper Production710,000 tonnesIn line with budget; planned maintenance at Głogów II
Silver Production1,347 tonnesWorld's 2nd largest producer by volume
C1 Cost (Group)USD 2.62/lb (Q1)-7% vs prior year; -17% ex-tax
Net Debt / Adj. EBITDA0.7×Conservative leverage; high liquidity maintained
Capital ExpendituresPLN 3.9 billionNew mine shaft construction: GG-1, GG-2, Retków, Gaworzyce

The Dividend — Returning to Policy

KGHM's Management Board has explicitly signalled its intention to return to its established dividend policy — distributing up to 30% of net profit — following a period in which capital was prioritised for the new shaft construction programme and debt management. With net profit of PLN 3.7 billion in 2025, a return to full dividend policy would imply a distribution of up to PLN 1.11 billion, representing a meaningful yield on current market capitalisation. The Board's own words from the Q4 2025 earnings call: "We can see grounds to be able to pay the dividend… it is a component worth discussing, and we will be making that recommendation to the shareholders meeting."

EBITDA 2023
PLN 8.4B
Base year
EBITDA 2024
PLN 8.4B
Stable through headwinds
EBITDA 2025
PLN 10.3B
+22% · Record
Dividend Policy
Up to 30%
of net profit · Resuming

Valuation

~16×
P/E Ratio (TTM)
~5.75×
EV / EBITDA (Approx.)
1.22 β
Beta (5Y Monthly) — Commodity Leverage
31.79%
Polish State Treasury — Stability Anchor

At roughly 5–6 times EBITDA, KGHM trades at a discount to global copper peers — a function of its Polish-market listing and the modest investor attention that Central European equities attract relative to their underlying quality. As the copper supply deficit deepens and EBITDA compounds with rising copper and silver prices, this discount is our margin of safety and our source of return.

V. Ownership & Community

The Polish State, 34,000 Workers, and a Six-Decade Social Compact

The Polish State Treasury's 31.79% stake in KGHM is not a passive financial position. It is a declaration of national strategic interest in a company that supplies approximately 40–50% of Europe's copper demand and holds an effective monopoly on Poland's silver output. This ownership structure provides KGHM with several concrete investment advantages: near-sovereign access to capital markets, long-term regulatory certainty, and a strategic orientation that protects the core asset base from short-term financial engineering.

KGHM's ~34,000 employees are predominantly Polish — concentrated in Lower Silesia, where the company is by far the dominant private-sector employer. The mining communities of Lubin, Głogów, Legnica, and Polkowice have built their economic identities around KGHM over sixty years. This is not merely a social fact. It is a competitive one: KGHM's workforce possesses accumulated operational knowledge of the Legnica-Głogów Belt — its geology, its water management challenges, its ore grades and processing characteristics — that cannot be replicated, hired away, or acquired by any competitor at any price. The knowledge lives in the people, and the people are here.

KGHM was founded on a principle that Catholic Social Teaching would recognise immediately: that the workers are not merely inputs to production, but participants in it — and that the wealth generated by their labour belongs in some meaningful part to the community that makes it possible. Sixty-four years of continuous operation, stable employment, and community investment in Lower Silesia are the concrete expression of that principle in action. Cf. Laborem Exercens §9 · Pope John Paul II · On Human Work, 1981 · "Work constitutes a foundation for the formation of family life"
VI. Risk Factors

What Could Go Wrong

Intellectual honesty is non-negotiable at Fides Polonia. The following material risks are acknowledged in full:

  • Commodity price volatility. KGHM's revenue and earnings are directly exposed to the global copper and silver price. A sustained decline in either — whether from demand slowdown, recession, or supply surplus — directly compresses EBITDA and earnings.
  • USD/PLN exchange rate risk. KGHM sells copper and silver in US dollars but reports and operates primarily in Polish złoty. A strengthening złoty — as seen in 2025 — reduces reported revenues and can compress margins despite stable operational performance.
  • Geological and operational risk. Underground mining in the Legnica-Głogów Belt requires active water management. KGHM has successfully managed flooding risk in recent years — including stabilising water inflow at Rudna and Polkowice-Sieroszowice — but subsurface conditions remain inherently unpredictable.
  • Copper extraction tax. Poland's minerals extraction tax is a material cost item for KGHM's domestic operations, growing by 21% in 2025. It is a direct function of metal prices, meaning it rises in precisely the environments where revenue also rises — partially smoothing, but also capping, the full earnings benefit of commodity price upswings.
  • Declining domestic ore grades. Management have acknowledged that Polish deposit grades will gradually decline over the next decade, requiring greater reliance on deepened mining infrastructure, new shafts, and international assets to maintain production volumes. The new shaft programme addresses this, but execution risk over a 15-year horizon is real.
  • Government influence. The State Treasury's 31.79% stake, while providing strategic stability, also creates the possibility of political objectives influencing capital allocation or dividend decisions — particularly in election years or periods of fiscal pressure on the Polish government.

None of these risks, in our assessment, impairs the long-term structural investment thesis. The global copper supply deficit, KGHM's unique asset position as Europe's primary copper and silver producer, its disciplined balance sheet, and the irreplaceable nature of its Lower Silesian reserves provide a foundation that comfortably accommodates these cyclical and operational headwinds.

VII. Investment Conclusion

The Fides Polonia Verdict

Fides Polonia Capital Management · Written by Daniel Chojnowski · April 2026
Strong Buy — Crown Jewel of the Polish Economy

Beneath the farmlands of Lower Silesia, Polish miners have been extracting the metals that power civilisation for sixty-four years. They mined copper for the factories of the Cold War. They refined silver for the electronics of the digital revolution. And now, as the world's data centres are wired with copper cables and its AI chips are bonded with silver — they are positioned at the absolute physical epicentre of the technological transformation of the twenty-first century. KGHM did not choose this moment. But it is extraordinarily well-positioned for it.

For the patient investor, here is what KGHM offers:

  • Europe's largest copper producer and the world's second-largest silver producer — 710,000 tonnes of copper and 1,347 tonnes of silver produced in 2025
  • Sixty-four years of continuous operation in Lower Silesia — irreplaceable geological knowledge, infrastructure, and workforce expertise that no competitor can replicate
  • PLN 10.3 billion in EBITDA in 2025 (+22%), PLN 3.7 billion in net profit (+28%) — record results driven by copper and silver price strength and cost discipline
  • Net debt to adjusted EBITDA of just 0.7× — conservatively financed, with strong cash flow and a renewed commitment to returning capital to shareholders via dividend
  • Direct exposure to the AI copper and silver demand supercycle — every hyperscale data centre built for AI requires 30–40 tonnes of copper per megawatt of capacity
  • 31.79% Polish State Treasury ownership — strategic stability, sovereign-grade capital market access, and long-term operational continuity
  • ~34,000 employees — predominantly Polish workers in Lower Silesian communities built around KGHM over three generations, representing a social compact and operational expertise no competitor can buy
  • New mine shaft construction programme (GG-1, GG-2, Retków, Gaworzyce) extending productive life and capacity into the 2040s — investments being made now whose returns will compound for the next two decades
  • Trading at approximately 5–6× EBITDA — a discount to global copper peers that represents our margin of safety and our source of long-term return as the supply deficit widens
  • Alignment with Catholic Social Teaching: a state-anchored company that has provided dignified employment to Polish mining communities for sixty-four years, stewarding a national natural resource in the service of the common good

Fides Polonia was built to find the businesses that the world has not yet properly priced — assets that are embedded in the real economy, generating real cash flows, serving real needs, backed by irreplaceable physical assets and loyal communities. KGHM is the deepest expression of that thesis we have found anywhere in Central Europe. It sits beneath Poland's soil. It employs Poland's workers. It supplies the metals that will wire the AI infrastructure of the next decade. And it is listed on the Warsaw Stock Exchange at a fraction of what an equivalent asset would command in London, New York, or Sydney. That gap between quality and price is not permanent. It is our opportunity.

KGH.WA · Warsaw Stock Exchange · ISIN: PLKGHM000017 · Rating: Strong Buy · Report Date: April 2026 · Written by Daniel Chojnowski · Fides Polonia Capital Management · Kraków, Poland
Speak With Daniel Return to Portfolio
Important Disclosure

This report is produced by Fides Polonia Capital Management for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice, a solicitation to buy or sell securities, or an offer of investment services regulated under any jurisdiction. All investment involves risk, including the possible loss of capital. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Mining and commodity investments are subject to additional risks including commodity price volatility, geological risk, operational risk, and regulatory changes. Investors should conduct their own due diligence or consult a qualified, licensed financial adviser before making investment decisions. All statistics are sourced from KGHM Polska Miedź S.A. investor relations, KGHM Annual Reports 2024–2025, World Silver Survey 2025, S&P Global, Wood Mackenzie, Warsaw Stock Exchange data, and independent financial databases as of April 2026. Fides Polonia Capital Management may hold positions in securities discussed in this report.

Powrót do Portfela Wstęp

Metal pod Polskimi Stopami — i w Sercu Ery AI

Gdy pytasz o miedź, większość inwestorów myśli o Chilijskich kopalniach lub australijskich konglomeratach górniczych. Niewielu myśli o Lubinie w Polsce. A jednak Lubin jest domem dla jednej z najbardziej niezwykłych operacji wydobywczych na świecie — KGHM Polska Miedź, spółki, która wydobywa zarówno miedź jak i srebro z podziemnych złóż biegnących pod Dolnym Śląskiem od sześćdziesięciu czterech lat.

I. Przegląd Firmy

Sześćdziesiąt Cztery Lata Wydobycia Polskiego Skarbu Narodowego

KGHM Polska Miedź S.A. to zintegrowany producent miedzi i srebra z siedzibą w Lubinie w Polsce, działający od 1961 roku. Spółka prowadzi kompleks kopalniano-hutniczy na Dolnym Śląsku w Polsce — jeden z największych zakładów wydobycia miedzi w Europie — oraz posiada znaczące aktywa w Ameryce Północnej i Chile. 34,2% akcji należy do Skarbu Państwa Polskiego.

II. Zasoby Naturalne

Największa Kopalnia Miedzi w Europie — i Najbardziej Produktywna Operacja Srebra na Świecie

Złoże miedzi na Dolnym Śląsku jest fenomenem geologicznym: rozległy, stosunkowo płaski pokład rudny, który biegnie na głębokości 600–1 200 metrów pod powierzchnią na obszarze kilkuset kilometrów kwadratowych. To właśnie ta geometria złoża — płaski zamiast żyłowego — pozwala KGHM-owi osiągać produktywność, której inne kopalnie po prostu nie mogą dopasować. Srebro — wytwarzane jako produkt uboczny procesu wytopu miedzi — plasuje Polskę wśród największych producentów srebra na świecie.

III. Teza Inwestycyjna

Supercykl AI: Dlaczego Miedź i Srebro to Metale Ery Maszyn

Rewolucja AI nie żywi się danymi — żywi się miedzią. Każdy serwer, kabel sieciowy, transformator energetyczny, punkt ładowania EV i linia przesyłowa odnawialnych źródeł energii wymaga miedzi. McKinsey szacuje, że popyt na miedź wzrośnie o 20% do 2031 roku jedynie z tytułu infrastruktury AI i EV. Tymczasem nowe duże złoża miedzi są niezwykle rzadkie, a czas budowy kopalni wynosi 15–20 lat. Złoże na Dolnym Śląsku już istnieje. KGHM je wydobywa.

IV. Wyniki Finansowe

Liczby: Rekordowe Wyniki, Twierdza Bilansowa, Rosnące Zwroty

KGHM regularnie osiąga EBITDA przekraczające 5 mld PLN, przy niskim zadłużeniu i rosnącej dywidendzie. Spółka korzysta na wyższych cenach miedzi napędzanych popytem na elektryfikację i AI, jednocześnie utrzymując strukturę kosztów zakorzenioną w polskich kopalniach, gdzie koszt wydobycia jest stosunkowo niski ze względu na unikalną geologię złoża.

V. Wymiar Społeczny

Państwo Polskie, 34 000 Pracowników i Sześcioletni Kompakt Społeczny

KGHM zatrudnia ponad 34 000 osób — głównie w regionie Zagłębia Miedziowego Dolnego Śląska, gdzie jest największym pracodawcą. Spółka jest częścią tkanki społecznej tego regionu od ponad sześćdziesięciu lat. To zaangażowanie — podobnie jak udział Skarbu Państwa — jest zarówno źródłem stabilności, jak i odpowiedzialności; oba czynniki przyjmujemy w naszej analizie z otwartymi oczami.

VI. Czynniki Ryzyka

Co Może Pójść Nie Tak

Zmienność cen towarów: ceny miedzi i srebra mogą gwałtownie spaść w przypadku recesji globalnej lub schłodzenia chińskiego sektora przemysłowego. Głębokość kopalni: wraz z eksploatacją złóż wydobycie wymaga schodzenia coraz głębiej, co zwiększa koszty. Ryzyko geopolityczne w Chile: Sierra Gorda jest narażona na niestabilność regulacyjną i społeczną w Chile. Wpływ polityki rządu: Skarb Państwa może stawiać zatrudnienie ponad stopę zwrotu dla akcjonariuszy.

VII. Werdykt

Werdykt Fides Polonia

Zakup — Niezbędny Metal Polski w Wieku AI. KGHM daje inwestorowi ekspozycję na dwa z czterech krytycznych metali epoki AI i elektryfikacji (miedź i srebro) poprzez operację o niskich kosztach, z silną dywidendą, utrzymywaną przez państwo-akcjonariusza z silnym politycznym motywem do zachowania wartości spółki. Przy tej wycenie jest to jeden z najbardziej przekonujących sposobów na zainwestowanie w supercykl miedzi bez płacenia za australijskie czy chilijskie ryzyko.

Niniejszy raport sporządzony jest przez Fides Polonia Capital Management wyłącznie w celach informacyjnych i nie stanowi porady finansowej.