March 26, 2026
Here’s what was covered in episode 358:
Macro Musings - Volatility remains the defining feature of this market, but it’s not a one-dimensional story. Equity volatility (VIX ~27–28) is elevated but not extreme, gold volatility (GVZ) has surged back toward the mid-40s, and currency and bond market volatility continue to send mixed signals. The result is wide, often violent price swings that feel worse than they are structurally.
Gold has held key support in the ~$4,320–$4,350 range despite massive liquidation pressures, including central bank activity and record outflows from commodity ETFs. That resilience matters. It suggests that while liquidity events are forcing sales, the underlying bid for gold remains intact, at least for now.
Silver and copper are weaker in the near term, but that does not break the broader thesis. Both remain in long-term bull markets driven by structural supply constraints and demand from electrification, defense, and industrial policy. This is a correction, not a collapse.
The broader inflation picture is also shifting. Rising energy prices are feeding into “whack-a-mole” inflation dynamics, where pressures rotate across sectors — from hard commodities to softs like agriculture and food inputs. The takeaway is simple: inflation is not gone, and volatility is not going away anytime soon.
Market Takes - The current environment is being shaped by a combination of war-driven uncertainty, rising energy prices, and shifting rate expectations.
Oil near $100 is pushing inflation higher, which in turn is delaying or eliminating expectations for rate cuts. The two-year yield is reflecting that reality, and markets are beginning to price in a scenario where rates stay higher for longer — or even move higher again. That creates a difficult backdrop for equities broadly, but it continues to support the hard-asset thesis.
At the same time, liquidity dynamics are driving short-term price action. Gold is being sold not because the thesis is broken, but because it is one of the most liquid assets available when margin calls hit. Turkey’s gold sales are a perfect example — gold is doing exactly what it is supposed to do as a reserve asset.
Looking forward, the discussion turned to potential policy responses. There is a growing probability of some form of bond market intervention — effectively quantitative easing under a different name — if rates rise too far or economic conditions deteriorate further. If that happens, it would be materially bullish for gold and commodities.
Meanwhile, the longer-term trend remains clear: deficits are expanding, debt is growing, and governments will continue to prioritize access to critical resources. That includes metals, energy, and supply chains that are increasingly viewed as strategic assets.
Bizarro Banter - The broader societal backdrop continues to feel unstable and contradictory. Policy decisions, messaging, and geopolitical strategy are shifting rapidly — sometimes daily, sometimes hourly — and that uncertainty is feeding directly into markets.
The conversation touched on the growing disconnect between political messaging and economic reality, as well as the frustration felt by many voters across the spectrum. The sense that there is no clear strategy — or that decisions are being made for reasons that are not fully transparent — is becoming harder to ignore.
There was also discussion around generational change and the idea that meaningful reform may not come until a new cohort of leadership takes power. Until then, the environment is likely to remain volatile, reactive, and driven by short-term decision-making rather than long-term planning.
At a more practical level, the takeaway was to stay grounded. Control what you can control — portfolio positioning, liquidity, and risk management — and avoid getting pulled too far into the emotional swings of the moment.
Premium Portfolio Picks - Despite the volatility, the market is still rewarding real discoveries and meaningful progress.
The standout this week was Cosa Resources (TSX-V: COSA)(OTC: COSAF), which announced a significant uranium discovery in its first drill hole in the Athabasca Basin. The stock responded accordingly, up roughly 47–52% on the week. The key detail: anomalous radioactivity readings far above baseline levels, combined with geological indicators consistent with major basin discoveries.
The message is clear — if you deliver results, the market will respond, even in a difficult environment.
Beyond Cosa, several names that had been heavily sold off are beginning to stabilize. Companies like Hannan Metals (TSX-V: HAN)(OTC: HANNF), Kingsmen Resources (TSX-V: KNG)(OTC: KNGRF), and Lion Rock Resources (TSX-V: ROAR)(OTC: LRRIF) are no longer seeing indiscriminate selling and are starting to find footing after steep pullbacks.
Nick highlighted continued buying in Headwater Gold (TSX-V: HWG)(OTC: HWAUF), where a recent financing at $0.58 created a dislocation with shares trading significantly below that level. With strong partners, a solid treasury, and active exploration programs, the pullback presented an opportunity to add.
Denison Mines (NYSE: DNN)(TSX: DML) was also discussed as a longer-term uranium play, tied to the next generation of Athabasca production.
The broader theme remains unchanged:
Portfolio structure matters as much as stock selection. Maintaining cash — or near-cash equivalents — has allowed for selective buying during this pullback, without forcing decisions under pressure.
March 26, 2026
Here’s what was covered in episode 358:
Macro Musings - Volatility remains the defining feature of this market, but it’s not a one-dimensional story. Equity volatility (VIX ~27–28) is elevated but not extreme, gold volatility (GVZ) has surged back toward the mid-40s, and currency and bond market volatility continue to send mixed signals. The result is wide, often violent price swings that feel worse than they are structurally.
Gold has held key support in the ~$4,320–$4,350 range despite massive liquidation pressures, including central bank activity and record outflows from commodity ETFs. That resilience matters. It suggests that while liquidity events are forcing sales, the underlying bid for gold remains intact, at least for now.
Silver and copper are weaker in the near term, but that does not break the broader thesis. Both remain in long-term bull markets driven by structural supply constraints and demand from electrification, defense, and industrial policy. This is a correction, not a collapse.
The broader inflation picture is also shifting. Rising energy prices are feeding into “whack-a-mole” inflation dynamics, where pressures rotate across sectors — from hard commodities to softs like agriculture and food inputs. The takeaway is simple: inflation is not gone, and volatility is not going away anytime soon.
Market Takes - The current environment is being shaped by a combination of war-driven uncertainty, rising energy prices, and shifting rate expectations.
Oil near $100 is pushing inflation higher, which in turn is delaying or eliminating expectations for rate cuts. The two-year yield is reflecting that reality, and markets are beginning to price in a scenario where rates stay higher for longer — or even move higher again. That creates a difficult backdrop for equities broadly, but it continues to support the hard-asset thesis.
At the same time, liquidity dynamics are driving short-term price action. Gold is being sold not because the thesis is broken, but because it is one of the most liquid assets available when margin calls hit. Turkey’s gold sales are a perfect example — gold is doing exactly what it is supposed to do as a reserve asset.
Looking forward, the discussion turned to potential policy responses. There is a growing probability of some form of bond market intervention — effectively quantitative easing under a different name — if rates rise too far or economic conditions deteriorate further. If that happens, it would be materially bullish for gold and commodities.
Meanwhile, the longer-term trend remains clear: deficits are expanding, debt is growing, and governments will continue to prioritize access to critical resources. That includes metals, energy, and supply chains that are increasingly viewed as strategic assets.
Bizarro Banter - The broader societal backdrop continues to feel unstable and contradictory. Policy decisions, messaging, and geopolitical strategy are shifting rapidly — sometimes daily, sometimes hourly — and that uncertainty is feeding directly into markets.
The conversation touched on the growing disconnect between political messaging and economic reality, as well as the frustration felt by many voters across the spectrum. The sense that there is no clear strategy — or that decisions are being made for reasons that are not fully transparent — is becoming harder to ignore.
There was also discussion around generational change and the idea that meaningful reform may not come until a new cohort of leadership takes power. Until then, the environment is likely to remain volatile, reactive, and driven by short-term decision-making rather than long-term planning.
At a more practical level, the takeaway was to stay grounded. Control what you can control — portfolio positioning, liquidity, and risk management — and avoid getting pulled too far into the emotional swings of the moment.
Premium Portfolio Picks - Despite the volatility, the market is still rewarding real discoveries and meaningful progress.
The standout this week was Cosa Resources (TSX-V: COSA)(OTC: COSAF), which announced a significant uranium discovery in its first drill hole in the Athabasca Basin. The stock responded accordingly, up roughly 47–52% on the week. The key detail: anomalous radioactivity readings far above baseline levels, combined with geological indicators consistent with major basin discoveries.
The message is clear — if you deliver results, the market will respond, even in a difficult environment.
Beyond Cosa, several names that had been heavily sold off are beginning to stabilize. Companies like Hannan Metals (TSX-V: HAN)(OTC: HANNF), Kingsmen Resources (TSX-V: KNG)(OTC: KNGRF), and Lion Rock Resources (TSX-V: ROAR)(OTC: LRRIF) are no longer seeing indiscriminate selling and are starting to find footing after steep pullbacks.
Nick highlighted continued buying in Headwater Gold (TSX-V: HWG)(OTC: HWAUF), where a recent financing at $0.58 created a dislocation with shares trading significantly below that level. With strong partners, a solid treasury, and active exploration programs, the pullback presented an opportunity to add.
Denison Mines (NYSE: DNN)(TSX: DML) was also discussed as a longer-term uranium play, tied to the next generation of Athabasca production.
The broader theme remains unchanged:
Portfolio structure matters as much as stock selection. Maintaining cash — or near-cash equivalents — has allowed for selective buying during this pullback, without forcing decisions under pressure.
March 26, 2026
Here’s what was covered in episode 358:
Macro Musings - Volatility remains the defining feature of this market, but it’s not a one-dimensional story. Equity volatility (VIX ~27–28) is elevated but not extreme, gold volatility (GVZ) has surged back toward the mid-40s, and currency and bond market volatility continue to send mixed signals. The result is wide, often violent price swings that feel worse than they are structurally.
Gold has held key support in the ~$4,320–$4,350 range despite massive liquidation pressures, including central bank activity and record outflows from commodity ETFs. That resilience matters. It suggests that while liquidity events are forcing sales, the underlying bid for gold remains intact, at least for now.
Silver and copper are weaker in the near term, but that does not break the broader thesis. Both remain in long-term bull markets driven by structural supply constraints and demand from electrification, defense, and industrial policy. This is a correction, not a collapse.
The broader inflation picture is also shifting. Rising energy prices are feeding into “whack-a-mole” inflation dynamics, where pressures rotate across sectors — from hard commodities to softs like agriculture and food inputs. The takeaway is simple: inflation is not gone, and volatility is not going away anytime soon.
Market Takes - The current environment is being shaped by a combination of war-driven uncertainty, rising energy prices, and shifting rate expectations.
Oil near $100 is pushing inflation higher, which in turn is delaying or eliminating expectations for rate cuts. The two-year yield is reflecting that reality, and markets are beginning to price in a scenario where rates stay higher for longer — or even move higher again. That creates a difficult backdrop for equities broadly, but it continues to support the hard-asset thesis.
At the same time, liquidity dynamics are driving short-term price action. Gold is being sold not because the thesis is broken, but because it is one of the most liquid assets available when margin calls hit. Turkey’s gold sales are a perfect example — gold is doing exactly what it is supposed to do as a reserve asset.
Looking forward, the discussion turned to potential policy responses. There is a growing probability of some form of bond market intervention — effectively quantitative easing under a different name — if rates rise too far or economic conditions deteriorate further. If that happens, it would be materially bullish for gold and commodities.
Meanwhile, the longer-term trend remains clear: deficits are expanding, debt is growing, and governments will continue to prioritize access to critical resources. That includes metals, energy, and supply chains that are increasingly viewed as strategic assets.
Bizarro Banter - The broader societal backdrop continues to feel unstable and contradictory. Policy decisions, messaging, and geopolitical strategy are shifting rapidly — sometimes daily, sometimes hourly — and that uncertainty is feeding directly into markets.
The conversation touched on the growing disconnect between political messaging and economic reality, as well as the frustration felt by many voters across the spectrum. The sense that there is no clear strategy — or that decisions are being made for reasons that are not fully transparent — is becoming harder to ignore.
There was also discussion around generational change and the idea that meaningful reform may not come until a new cohort of leadership takes power. Until then, the environment is likely to remain volatile, reactive, and driven by short-term decision-making rather than long-term planning.
At a more practical level, the takeaway was to stay grounded. Control what you can control — portfolio positioning, liquidity, and risk management — and avoid getting pulled too far into the emotional swings of the moment.
Premium Portfolio Picks - Despite the volatility, the market is still rewarding real discoveries and meaningful progress.
The standout this week was Cosa Resources (TSX-V: COSA)(OTC: COSAF), which announced a significant uranium discovery in its first drill hole in the Athabasca Basin. The stock responded accordingly, up roughly 47–52% on the week. The key detail: anomalous radioactivity readings far above baseline levels, combined with geological indicators consistent with major basin discoveries.
The message is clear — if you deliver results, the market will respond, even in a difficult environment.
Beyond Cosa, several names that had been heavily sold off are beginning to stabilize. Companies like Hannan Metals (TSX-V: HAN)(OTC: HANNF), Kingsmen Resources (TSX-V: KNG)(OTC: KNGRF), and Lion Rock Resources (TSX-V: ROAR)(OTC: LRRIF) are no longer seeing indiscriminate selling and are starting to find footing after steep pullbacks.
Nick highlighted continued buying in Headwater Gold (TSX-V: HWG)(OTC: HWAUF), where a recent financing at $0.58 created a dislocation with shares trading significantly below that level. With strong partners, a solid treasury, and active exploration programs, the pullback presented an opportunity to add.
Denison Mines (NYSE: DNN)(TSX: DML) was also discussed as a longer-term uranium play, tied to the next generation of Athabasca production.
The broader theme remains unchanged:
Portfolio structure matters as much as stock selection. Maintaining cash — or near-cash equivalents — has allowed for selective buying during this pullback, without forcing decisions under pressure.