Investors are dropping Gold and Silver like they’re hot.
But don’t let the sellers push you toward the exit.
It might look ugly, but a corrective period following Gold’s vertical rally to our initial target sounds about right. Plus, three of our current long positions – Harmony $HMY, Wheaton $WPM, and Kinross $KGC – posted new 52-week highs Thursday.
I expect the new highs list to expand as Gold and Silver work through overhead supply in the coming months.
Instead of sweating today’s selling pressure, I’m placing orders to buy the following two mining stocks on a breakout…
It’s easy to overlook while gold shines and silver rips. But during the last commodity supercycle, platinum traded at a premium to the famous shiny yellow rock (and still does regarding retail jewelry).
Now, whether we consider the shiny yellow rock a viable investment is another story.
You know I’m bullish…
Yet I can’t overlook silver’s lack of participation.
I think of silver as gold’s rambunctious cousin — lots of fun until someone gets hurt — and someone always gets hurt!
Perhaps trading silver isn’t your cup of tea. I don’t blame you.
But silver rallies possess an infectious exuberance. Its rowdy antics and monstrous daily ranges magnetize investors as they attempt to skirt silver’s flame without burning to a crisp.
Unfortunately, silver isn’t bringing the heat. It has yet to break out, and the silver-to-gold ratio is trending lower.
A similar scenario unfolded last spring when gold ran up against its former all-time highs:
Friends and family are blowing up my phone (and this time, it’s not just about baby pics). They’ve noticed gold’s rally to new highs – and they want to know whether to buy physical gold or an ETF — bars or coins.
But silver has yet to enter the conversation…
I get it. New all-time highs have a way of capturing the investor’s collective conscience.
But while gold is printing new all-time highs, silver futures post a mere multi-month high.
I’m no fan of the catch-up trade, as I always want to own the strongest name(s), but check out silver’s four-decade base: