When a commodity sector is rallying, resist the temptation to chase laggards (the "degeneracy tail" like platinum). Instead, focus capital on the established leaders (gold/silver), as chasing underperformers often leads to poor risk-adjusted returns.
A consistent, lagging relationship exists where gold prices rally first, and Bitcoin follows after a period of consolidation. This pattern, observed over multiple cycles, suggests capital flows into "sound money" assets sequentially, starting with the traditional store of value before moving to the digital alternative.
Establish a foundational, long-term position in physical precious metals first. This "bedrock" provides stability and conviction, allowing you to then make more tactical, risk-managed trades in leveraged but more volatile assets like gold and silver miners.
In an environment characterized by a series of sector-specific bull runs (e.g., from semis to metals), a winning strategy is to actively trade breakouts as they occur. This capitalizes on rotational leadership and momentum rather than relying on a static portfolio.
Use signals like blow-off tops in adjacent assets (e.g., Oracle for AI) to gauge a sector's maturity. This framework helps differentiate "late inning" trades like AI from "early inning" opportunities like gold miners, guiding effective capital rotation.
The sign of a working diversification strategy is having something in your portfolio that you're unhappy with. Chasing winners by selling the laggard is a common mistake that leads to buying high and selling low. The discomfort of holding an underperformer is proof the strategy is functioning as intended, not that it's failing.
Decades of underperformance, driven by government policy favoring other sectors, have left the commodities space (metals, oil & gas) without a new generation of "rockstar" investors. This talent and capital vacuum means that even small inflows from passive strategies could trigger outsized price moves as capital rotates.
For 50 years, commodity prices moved together, driven by synchronized global demand. J.P. Morgan identifies a breakdown of this trend since 2024, dubbing it the 'crocodile cycle,' where supply-side factors cause metals to outperform while energy underperforms, creating a widening gap like a crocodile's mouth.
Gold is a low-returning asset, similar to cash. Its primary value in a portfolio is not appreciation but diversification. During periods of stagflation or debt crises when other assets like stocks and bonds perform poorly, gold tends to do very well, stabilizing the portfolio.
Silver's investment case is structurally weaker and more volatile than gold's. It lacks a 'central bank anchor' to stabilize its price, operates in a much smaller and less liquid market, and is prone to technical dislocations like physical shortages in a specific location, such as the recent 'London squeeze'.
Investors hesitant to buy assets like gold near all-time highs can use trend following for exposure. The strategy systematically enters prevailing trends and, crucially, provides a built-in, non-emotional exit signal when the trend reverses, mitigating timing risk.