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Dear Fellow Investor,
Gold Could Easily Rally to $5,000 in Early 2026
Gold is hitting record highs, and the conversation is quickly shifting from “Why is it rising?” to “How far can it run?”
Just days after the Federal Reserve cut interest rates by another quarter point, Philadelphia Federal Reserve President Anna Paulson highlighted a change in emphasis that markets pay close attention to: unemployment may now be the bigger threat than inflation. If the labor market weakens, the Fed has historically moved faster and more decisively to support growth.
“That’s partly because I see a decent chance that inflation will come down as we go through next year,” the central banker said, as quoted by CNBC.
If inflation continues to cool while growth shows cracks, the path of least resistance for policy may be lower rates. For gold, that matters. Gold does not pay interest, so it tends to look more attractive when yields decline, especially when real yields (yields after inflation) fall. Put simply: when cash and bonds pay less in inflation-adjusted terms, the “opportunity cost” of owning gold drops.
With gold last trading at $4,342.81, some analysts are already arguing that $5,000 gold is plausible in the new year, and potentially achievable in early 2026. That may sound aggressive, but it becomes easier to understand when you consider how gold behaves in the later stages of monetary easing cycles, and how quickly investor positioning can change when momentum turns.
Why the next move could be higher
Several forces can work together to push gold higher, sometimes faster than investors expect:
1) A lower-rate environment can be a tailwind.
Gold often responds to expectations for rate cuts, not just rate cuts themselves. If markets start pricing a sequence of easing steps, especially if the Fed signals it is more concerned about employment than inflation, gold can re-rate higher as investors anticipate weaker real yields and a potentially softer U.S. dollar.
2) The “risk premium” is back in focus.
Gold tends to benefit when investors want portfolio insurance, whether that’s due to economic slowdown risk, geopolitical uncertainty, financial system concerns, or volatility in equities and credit. The point isn’t that any one risk must materialize. It’s that when risks feel less predictable, demand for hedges tends to rise.
3) Central bank and institutional demand can tighten the market.
Gold is a relatively small market compared to global bonds and equities. Incremental buying, by official institutions, large funds, or retail investors via ETFs, can have an outsized impact. When demand increases at the margin, price can move sharply because supply is slow to respond.
4) Momentum can become self-reinforcing.
New all-time highs tend to attract attention, headlines, and new capital. If investors who missed the move try to “catch up,” price can rise faster than fundamentals alone would suggest. In those periods, gold mining stocks and junior miners often show even more volatility, both up and down.
Banyan HIll Publishing
Buffett, Gates and Bezos Dumping Stocks
Over the past several months, we've noticed a troubling pattern:
Warren Buffett has liquidated $6.8 billion in stocks.
Bill Gates has sold off 500,000 shares of Microsoft.
And Jeff Bezos filed to sell Amazon shares worth $4.8 billion.
What is going on?
One multi-millionaire believes they are preparing for a catastrophic event…
But not a crash… or a bank run… or even a recession.
He says, we’ve entered something called a “Terrifying Bull Market.”
Jeftovic recently revealed which corner of the market these billionaires are favoring now and how everyday Americans can follow their lead before it's too late.
For his full briefing, click here.
What $5,000 gold could mean for investors
If gold pushes toward $5,000, it likely won’t be a straight line. Gold can be volatile, and sharp pullbacks are common even in strong bull trends. But if the broader direction remains higher, investors have multiple ways to express the view - each with different risk and return characteristics:
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Physical gold for direct exposure and long-term portfolio insurance
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Major gold miners for operational leverage to higher prices
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Junior miners and explorers for higher-risk, higher-torque upside
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ETFs to diversify single-stock risk and simplify access
In general, mining equities can outperform bullion in strong upswings because higher gold prices can expand profit margins and free cash flow. However, miners also introduce new risks: operational issues, cost inflation, permitting/regulatory surprises, and broader equity-market drawdowns.
Three gold ETFs to keep on your radar
Below are three ETF approaches that can provide diversified exposure across the gold mining spectrum, from established producers to earlier-stage explorers.
ETF: VanEck Vectors Gold Miners ETF (SYM: GDX)
If you want broad exposure to large, established gold miners, GDX is a go-to vehicle. It holds many of the industry’s global leaders, including Newmont Corp., Barrick Gold, Franco-Nevada, Agnico Eagle Mines, Gold Fields, and Wheaton Precious Metals, among others.
Why GDX can matter in a rising-gold environment:
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Scale and liquidity: Easier to trade and typically less fragile than small caps.
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Operational leverage: Higher gold prices can flow into margins and cash flow.
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Diversification across producers: Reduces single-mine and single-jurisdiction risk.
That said, large miners can underperform during risk-off equity selloffs, even when gold holds up. If you’re using GDX, it helps to treat it as an equity allocation with commodity sensitivity—not a perfect substitute for bullion.
ETF: Sprott Junior Gold Miners ETF (SYM: SGDJ)
For investors seeking more torque, SGDJ targets smaller-cap gold companies via the Solactive Junior Gold Miners Custom Factors Index. Junior miners can move dramatically when gold sentiment turns bullish because investors begin to price in growth, optionality, and improved access to financing.
Why juniors can outperform:
But the risk profile is meaningfully higher:
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Financing/dilution risk: Juniors may issue shares to fund operations and development.
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Higher volatility and drawdowns: Swings can be sharp, and liquidity can dry up quickly in risk-off markets.
SGDJ can be a useful satellite position for bullish investors—but it generally requires stricter position sizing and a stronger stomach for volatility.
ETF: Global X Gold Explorers ETF (SYM: GOEX)
GOEX focuses on companies involved in gold deposit exploration. Some of its holdings include Coeur Mining, Lundin Gold, Hecla Mining, New Gold Inc., SSR Mining, and Alamos Gold. GOEX also pays a semi-annual dividend, which can be an added consideration for income-oriented investors.
Why GOEX is distinct:
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Exploration and discovery exposure: If the market rewards new resources and growth pipelines, explorers can benefit.
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Early-cycle torque: Explorers can move ahead of confirmed cash-flow improvements.
Exploration exposure also means:
A practical way to approach a bullish gold thesis
If you believe the $5,000 scenario is plausible, consider structuring exposure rather than making a single all-in bet:
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Core + satellite: Use a steadier core (physical gold or a broad miner ETF like GDX) with smaller satellite positions (SGDJ/GOEX) for upside torque.
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Stagger entries: Gold-related assets can gap and reverse quickly. Layering in over time can reduce timing risk.
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Define risk up front: Decide what would invalidate your thesis (e.g., meaningfully higher real yields, a sharp USD rally, or a decisive hawkish pivot).
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Right-size juniors: If you use junior/explorer exposure, keep allocations modest relative to your core.
Crypto 101
What the crypto bounce is really offering
Let's be honest… most everyday investors didn't buy the bottom.
When crypto prices were at their lowest, fear was at its highest.
So forget the bottom. It's gone.
What matters now is that the recovery is creating a second opportunity that's almost as good… maybe better, because now we have CONFIRMATION.
The crash revealed exactly which cryptos have real staying power. Speculation got flushed out.
What's left is fundamentals.
One crypto in particular is showing a setup I've seen lead to runs like 8,600% on OCEAN... 3,500% on PRE... 1,743% on ALBT.
Strong on-chain data. Growing network. Active development. All while still trading well below where it should be.
Your second chance could be here… get the details here now before the window closes.
Are there any other gold stocks/ETFs you're buying right now? What other sectors of the market are you currently interested in? Hit "reply" to this email and let us know your thoughts!