Trade Ideas
Williams states silver is currently trading above $100 and notes, "I don't think it's in an inning. This is the national anthem. It's just getting started." He cites Eric Sprott’s target of $200. The market is driven by a structural deficit (3 years running) and massive industrial demand (Solar/AI/Electrification). Additionally, he notes banks (specifically JP Morgan) appear to be covering short positions, which acts as rocket fuel for the spot price. Long physical silver (or proxy) to capture the momentum toward $200. A sudden resolution of the structural deficit or a major pullback in industrial manufacturing demand.
Aftermath Silver (AAGFF) has a market cap of ~$418M with a resource of 124M oz silver, 1B lbs copper, and significant manganese. The stock is up 3x YoY but Williams argues it is still undervalued relative to the metal in the ground at current prices ($100+ Ag). Junior miners offer leverage ("torque") to the spot price. While the ETF/Physical metal moves 1:1, a miner with a large resource and fixed costs expands margins exponentially as the price rises. The manganese component acts as a "hidden" asset for the EV battery supply chain. Long AAGFF as a high-beta play on the silver bull market. Geopolitical risk in Peru (though described as manageable), execution risk on the Pre-Feasibility Study (PFS), or inability to raise CAPEX.
Williams observes that while silver has moved, the junior sector often lags initially but then catches up violently. He notes, "When silver moves, we move." Investors initially flock to the safety of physical metal (SLV) or majors. Once the trend is established (>$100 Ag), capital rotates down the risk curve to juniors (SILJ) to chase higher returns/leverage. Long Junior Silver Miners to capture the second phase of the bull market rerating. Rising input costs (inflation) eating into miner margins despite higher revenue.
Williams highlights that their project has 1 billion pounds of copper and recent drilling hit "1.12% copper" over significant intervals. He links this to the same electrification thesis driving silver. Silver and Copper are "conjoined twins" in the electrification/AI trade. If silver is at $100 due to conductive demand, copper (the primary conductive metal) must logically participate in the same rally. Long Copper miners as a diversified play on the same macro theme (electrification/infrastructure). Global recession reducing industrial demand for base metals.