Metals Dip Buying
Gold dipped below $3,400, silver touched $42, miners down double digits. These pullbacks aren't signals to sell — they're the best buying opportunities in months.
November 2025Why the Dip Happened
The trigger was textbook: hotter-than-expected payrolls sparked "no landing" chatter, yields ticked higher, dollar strengthened. Thin holiday liquidity amplified the move.
None of this changes the big picture. Real inflation is still crushing households. Tariff costs are embedded. Fiscal deficits are exploding. Geopolitical risk is elevated.
These drivers pushed gold from $2,600 to $3,500+. A 10% dip doesn't erase them — it reloads the spring.
Fundamentals Stronger Than Ever
- Central banks: Another massive quarter of buying — China and EM nations leading
- Supply side: Mine production flat-to-down across gold, silver, platinum, palladium
- Uranium: Chronic deficits as nuclear buildout accelerates for AI power demand
- Industrial demand: Silver in solar/EVs, platinum in hydrogen — surging on reindustrialization
Our Play: Keep Adding
We went maximum overweight metals back in August. Every meaningful dip since has been an excuse to add more:
Gold and silver for pure monetary hedge. Platinum and palladium for undervalued scarcity. Uranium for the clean-energy bottleneck.
Miners and royalty companies give us leveraged upside with better cash flows than pure physical.
Bottom Line
Metals dips aren't warnings — they're gifts. The inflation/debasement drivers are intensifying, not fading. Supply/demand imbalances are widening.
This is exactly how you build wealth in a structural bull: buy the fear, not the euphoria. Hard money wins in the end. Stay greedy when others get fearful.
Vector Ridge is aggressively adding to precious/industrial metals on weakness — now beyond maximum overweight (gold, silver, platinum, palladium, uranium via physical, miners, and royalty streams). This is our largest thematic allocation by far. This article represents our views at the time of publication and should not be considered investment advice.
Hotter-than-expected payrolls sparked "no landing" chatter, which pushed yields higher and strengthened the dollar, sending gold below $3,400 and silver to around $42. Thin holiday liquidity amplified the move, but Vector Ridge views it as a pullback within a structural bull, not a reason to sell.
The underlying drivers — sticky inflation, embedded tariff costs, exploding fiscal deficits and elevated geopolitical risk — are intensifying, not fading, and a 10% dip does not erase them. Central-bank buying remains heavy while mine supply is flat-to-down across gold, silver, platinum and palladium, so the article frames dips as gifts rather than warnings.
Vector Ridge went maximum overweight metals in August and keeps adding on weakness: gold and silver as a monetary hedge, platinum and palladium for undervalued scarcity, and uranium for the clean-energy bottleneck driven by AI power demand. Miners and royalty companies are used for leveraged upside with better cash flows than pure physical.
Vector Ridge runs four models — Day Trade, Multi-Hour, Swing Trade and Investing — each carrying conviction grades from A (highest) to D (lowest), with this metals theme sitting squarely in the longer-horizon Investing model. Access is $20 per month for a single model or $50 per month for all four, with a 7-day free trial.