Jorge Durant
Analyst · Adrian Day Asset Management
Good morning to all. We continue to report strong operational and financial performance and according to our plans and guidance expect an even stronger second half of the year for production and costs. Over $225 million in sales, gold contributed 81% and silver 10%, with the balance being byproduct zinc and lead. We realized an average gold price in the quarter of $2,087 per ounce compared to $1,990 in the fourth quarter of 2023. Silver stayed flat at $23 quarter-over-quarter. Our attributable net income and adjusted net income for the quarter were both $26 million or $0.09 per share. Cash flow from operations before changes in working capital was $84 million or $0.28 per share.
Both earnings and cash flow were well ahead of analysts' consensus figures of $0.06 and $0.25 per share, respectively. All our mines delivered gold and silver production in line with our plans and within guidance range projections for the year. At 112,000 gold equivalent ounces, production was softer when compared to the previous 2 quarters where we had consecutive record production of 129,000 and 136,000 gold equivalent ounces in Q3 and Q4 of 2023, respectively. The reduction against previous quarters is largely explained by lower grade and ounces produced at Séguéla but well according to plan. Quarterly production during 2024 is planned to pick up throughout the year with Q1 having the lowest planned production.
All our mines reported consistent AISC tracking well to be within our annual guidance range. Consolidated cash cost per gold equivalent ounce was $879. And if we adjust for San Jose mine, which is mining on its last year of reserves, the cash cost is a low $744 per ounce. Consolidated AISC at $1,495 per gold equivalent ounce is on the very low end of our guidance range for the year, which is between $1,485 and $1,640 and slightly lower than this $1,509 we reported in Q4 2023.
The low AISC is largely explained by Séguéla higher gold production and lower cost per tonne against our budgets and timing of capital expenses at the Lindero mine leach pad expansion. The largest short-term opportunity in the portfolio today is a throughput optimization at the Séguéla mine, which continues to render fruit. After relining of the mill and other minor works in April, the plant is expected to reach a process rate of 220 dry metric tons per hour or 42% above nameplate capacity and 25% above our 2024 budget.
Looking forward, there is an emerging situation in April. In Cote d'Ivoire, technical failures at 2 gas plant sourcing power into the national grid has resulted in outages at national level. It is expected power will be restored at normal levels in July. With the information available at this moment, we believe guidance for the year at Séguéla is still achievable with no corresponding impact on consolidated guidance. With respect to capital allocation, management continued during the quarter to focus on 3 priorities: one, provide maximum flexibility to our balance sheet.
During the period, we paid an additional $40 million on our revolving credit facility, totaling $123 million since we started repayment in the third quarter of 2023. We brought net debt down to $83 million, and our total net debt-to-EBITDA ratio stands at a low 0.2:1. Our liquidity position stands at $212 million at the end of the quarter, essentially flat with respect to the previous quarter. Second is opportunistic return to shareholders. Management initiated its normal course issuer bid program in the quarter with the repurchase of 1 million shares for cancellation at an average price of $3.42 in the New York Stock Exchange. The normal course issuer bid has been renewed in April for an additional year for up to 5% of the issued and outstanding shares of the company.
And third, funding organic growth opportunities in our portfolio. Our priority exploration programs at Séguéla, Diamba Sud, San Jose and Yaramoko continue to yield positive results. At the Séguéla mine, in Côte d'Ivoire, the exploration team is planning to have new resources this year at the deposits of Badior, Kestrel, Gabbro North and Kingfisher. Of note is a newly discovered Kingfisher deposit where drilling continues to return consistent results over the 2-kilometer strike length of the identified mineralization.
A fourth drill rig has now been mobilized to Séguéla to further capitalize on these opportunities as well as examining the underground potential at deposits where we currently hold reserves in Koula, Ancien and Sunbird. At Yaramoko in Burkina Faso, we continue to make marginal gains of high-grade mineralization at the immediate boundaries of resources on Zone 55. These gains are potentially helping to reduce the rate of depletion in the life of mine by providing opportunity to sustain 2025 at above 100,000 ounces of gold production.
At San Jose in Mexico, we continue advancing the Yessi Vein exploration with 3 dedicated drill rigs and planning to add a fourth one in May. Results to date have defined potential economic mineralization within the 350 x 450-meter area, which remains open to the Southeast. Step-out drilling holes are being prioritized currently. For the second quarter, management is planning to drive a 150-meter drift to reach the core of the identified high-grade zone. And at Diamba Sud in Senegal, exploration and geotechnical drilling continues to advance according to plan along with environmental studies. Hydrologic drilling is set to begin in the second quarter.
And last but not least, we had a difficult start of the year on safety indicators for total recordable and lost time injury rates have been impacted by 4 lost time accidents in the quarter. We have now been operating for 50 days without any recordable accidents and are doubling down on active leadership and multiple other initiatives that Cesar and David will touch on with the objective of still achieving a third year of continued improvement on key safety metrics.
I'll now ask David to provide an update on West African operations. David?