Silver Closes In on Key Level
The silver market is putting on quite a show. Silver Trust (SLV) took another leg higher as geopolitical tensions ratcheted up, and the rally is starting to look like it has momentum behind it.
Here's what's happening: President Trump is turning up the heat on Venezuela by seizing more oil tankers, and the market is responding exactly as you'd expect when geopolitical risk spikes. Silver futures are currently trading at $68.83, closing in on the $70 magnet level that's been on the radar. For those tracking the Silver Trust ETF (SLV), the equivalent target sits at $63.51.
The technical picture shows SLV is overbought based on RSI readings, but that doesn't mean the party has to end immediately. Overbought markets can stay overbought longer than you'd expect, particularly when there's a clear catalyst driving the move. There's still room for the rally to extend further before exhaustion sets in.
For full transparency, SLV is a long position with an average entry point of $13.96, which puts the current rally in serious profit territory.
The Venezuela Factor
Silver isn't the only commodity catching a bid on the Venezuela news. Gold is hitting new highs, with SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) leading the charge. Gold miner Newmont Corporation (NEM) is also making new highs, benefiting from the strength in the underlying metal.
Copper is joining the party too. United States Copper Index Fund (CPER) is at new highs, along with major copper producer Freeport-McMoRan Inc (FCX). Another copper producer worth watching is First Quantum Minerals (FQVLF), which is considered a potential buyout target. The position carries an average entry of $9.09.
Oil is seeing buying pressure as well, which makes sense given that Venezuela is a major oil producer. When you start seizing tankers and raising the stakes, the market starts pricing in supply disruption risk.
And it's not just commodities. Stocks are catching a bid in early trading, also responding to the Venezuela developments. The logic here is a bit more nuanced, but essentially markets are weighing the potential outcomes.
The prior analysis on Venezuela still holds: If the U.S. attacks Venezuela and Venezuela resists, expect gold, silver, oil, and stocks to move higher. On the other hand, if Venezuela gives in or the U.S. prevails easily, expect all of these markets to pull back.
Santa Claus Rally and the FOMO Trade
Stock buying in the early market isn't just about Venezuela. Two other factors are driving flows: FOMO (fear of missing out) about a potential Santa Claus rally, and the weekend pump from momentum gurus who spent their Saturday hyping stocks to their followers.
The buying is particularly aggressive in AI stocks. Micron Technology Inc (MU), IREN Ltd (IREN), Oracle Corp (ORCL), CoreWeave Inc (CRWV), and Nebius Group NV (NBIS) are all seeing strong early demand.
Space stocks are also getting hit hard by buyers. Rocket Lab Corp (RKLB), AST SpaceMobile Inc (ASTS), and Firefly Aerospace Inc (FLY) are all surging. For full disclosure, Firefly Aerospace (FLY) is in the portfolio, and a signal was issued this morning to take partial profits.
Magnificent Seven Money Flows
Most portfolios these days are heavily concentrated in the Magnificent Seven stocks, which means paying attention to early money flows in these names matters more than ever. A bad day for the Mag 7 can sink your whole portfolio, regardless of what else you own.
In early trading, money flows are positive in Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN), Alphabet Inc Class C (GOOG), Meta Platforms Inc (META), Microsoft Corp (MSFT), NVIDIA Corp (NVDA), and Tesla Inc (TSLA).
Apple Inc (AAPL) is showing neutral money flows in the early session.
The broader market ETFs are also seeing positive flows. SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust Series 1 (QQQ) are both attracting money in early trading.
Smart Money Positioning
Understanding where the smart money is flowing gives investors an edge. Beyond just tracking SPY and QQQ, watching the major commodity ETFs provides insight into how sophisticated traders are positioning for risk.
The most popular gold ETF is SPDR Gold Trust (GLD). For silver, it's iShares Silver Trust (SLV). And for oil exposure, traders typically use United States Oil ETF (USO).
When these ETFs see coordinated buying alongside stock market strength, it often signals that traders are hedging their bets, preparing for potential volatility while still maintaining equity exposure.
Bitcoin Bounces
Bitcoin (BTC) is also seeing buying interest, adding another layer to the risk-on tone in early trading. Crypto has been trading somewhat in tandem with tech stocks lately, so the bounce fits the broader pattern of aggressive buying in growth-oriented assets.
Strategic Considerations
For investors navigating this environment, the playbook remains focused on balance. Consider continuing to hold quality long-term positions while maintaining appropriate protection through cash, Treasury bills, or tactical hedges depending on your risk tolerance and time horizon.
Your protection band should reflect your personal situation. Conservative or older investors should lean toward the high end of protection levels, while younger or more aggressive investors can operate with less protection. If you're not using hedges, your cash level should be higher than if you are hedging, but still significantly less than a combined cash-plus-hedges approach.
Think of a protection band as a spectrum: 0% protection means you're fully invested with maximum bullishness, while 100% protection indicates extreme bearishness with aggressive hedging or short positions.
Here's the thing people forget: you can't take advantage of new opportunities if you're not holding cash. When volatility eventually arrives, the investors with dry powder will have options. Those fully invested will be stuck watching.
When adjusting hedge levels, consider using partial stop quantities for individual stock positions (not ETFs). You might also want to use wider stops on remaining quantities, particularly for high beta stocks that naturally move more than the market.
The Bond Question
For those still committed to the traditional 60/40 portfolio split between stocks and bonds, the current environment requires some nuance. Probability-based risk-reward analysis adjusted for inflation doesn't favor long-duration strategic bond allocation right now.
If you're sticking with a 60% stock and 40% bond allocation, focus on high-quality bonds with durations of five years or less. More sophisticated investors might consider treating bond ETFs as tactical positions rather than strategic core holdings in this environment.
The rate environment is still working itself out, and until there's more clarity on the inflation path and Federal Reserve policy trajectory, keeping bond exposure short and high-quality makes sense.




