Franco-Nevada Corporation (FNV) Stock Analysis & Winston Score
Franco-Nevada is a Canadian company that does not mine gold itself. Instead, it pays mining companies upfront for the right to receive a share of whatever gold, silver, copper, or other metals those mines produce in the future. This business model is called "streaming and royalties," and Franco-Nevada is one of the largest companies in the world using it. Franco-Nevada earns revenue every time a mine it has a deal with ships metal. Because it does not run the mines, it avoids most of the costs and risks of actual mining, which explains its unusually high profit margins. The company has deals with over 400 properties across the Americas, Africa, and Australia, giving it broad geographic diversification. Its biggest single asset is a royalty on the Cobre Panama copper mine, which was suspended in late 2023 due to a government shutdown — a reminder that political and operational risks at partner mines can directly hurt revenue even though Franco-Nevada controls none of those operations.
Winston Score: 65/100 — Good
A decent business — some strong pillars, some weaker.
- Quality: Strong (22/30)
- Growth: Exceptional (20/20)
- Cash Flow: Good (6/10)
- Stability: Good (5/10)
- Valuation: Strong (7/10)
- Ownership: Weak (2/15)
Key Facts
Price: $200.77
Market Cap: $38.7B
Sector: Basic Materials
Industry: Gold
Exchange: New York Stock Exchange


