Trade Ideas
Mining stocks currently represent only ~1% of global equities, compared to ~11% in the 1970s. Exploration budgets are at 4-year lows despite high metal prices. The industry suffers from a decade of capital neglect. There are no new discoveries or supply coming online. As "generalist" capital rotates even slightly from US Tech to Resources, the small market cap of the mining sector will force a violent repricing upward. Long miners (Gold, Silver, Copper) to capture the operating leverage on rising commodity prices. Nationalization of assets (though he views LatAm as safer now) or rising energy costs hurting miner margins.
Costa notes that gold and silver are appreciating rapidly, yet the market is not yet pricing in "hyperinflation." He points out that central banks currently hold <25% of assets in gold (vs. 70% in the 1970s), implying massive room for mean reversion. He describes a sequential flow of capital: The move starts in Gold, rotates to Silver (which he sees hitting triple digits), and then flows into Platinum as a "catch-up" trade in precious metals. Long precious metals as a hedge against inevitable monetary debasement and fiscal dominance. A deflationary bust or a sudden strengthening of the US Dollar due to a liquidity crisis.
Costa observes a "great rotation out of US securities" and notes that the US must lower rates and weaken the currency to fix its trade balance and fiscal deficit. The US has a dual problem: Fiscal Deficit and Trade Deficit. The only mathematical solution that addresses both is a weaker currency (to boost exports) and lower rates (to reduce interest expense). This necessitates a structural decline in the USD. Short USD (or Long Real Assets denominated in USD). A global "flight to safety" into the Dollar during a geopolitical crisis.
Costa states "energy is unlikely to be cheap going forward." He cites a 30% contraction in US rig counts and the geopolitical shock of the Iran conflict. The market is complacent about energy supply. The combination of war (geopolitical risk premium) and structural underinvestment (falling rig counts) creates a supply squeeze. Energy is the prerequisite for the entire industrial economy. Long Energy producers and Oil futures. Demand destruction from a global recession.
Costa argues that once energy prices inflect upwards, "You're going to see ammonia prices going up... fertilizers... Corn prices going up." This is Second-Order Thinking. Energy (Natural Gas/Oil) is a primary input cost for modern agriculture (fertilizer production and diesel for machinery). If energy soars, food production costs soar, pushing up soft commodity prices. Long Agriculture and Fertilizer producers. Favorable weather creating bumper crops that suppress prices temporarily.
Costa highlights a strong correlation between the Brazilian stock market and Platinum prices. He notes Brazil's GDP is stagnant at 2013 levels due to high real rates (15%). As the US lowers rates (which Costa believes is inevitable to save the US sovereign balance sheet), the pressure on the USD releases. This allows Emerging Markets like Brazil to cut their own rates, unleashing economic growth in resource-rich nations. Long Brazil/LatAm as a high-beta play on the commodity supercycle and a falling Dollar. Political instability or a resurgence of the US Dollar.
This The David Lin Report video, published March 03, 2026,
features Tavi Costa
discussing GDX, COPX, SIL, GLD, SLV, PPLT, UUP, XLE, USO, CF, DBA, MOS, EWZ, ILF.
6 trade ideas extracted by AI with direction and confidence scoring.
Speakers:
Tavi Costa
· Tickers:
GDX,
COPX,
SIL,
GLD,
SLV,
PPLT,
UUP,
XLE,
USO,
CF,
DBA,
MOS,
EWZ,
ILF