Haymaker Friday Edition

Haymaker Friday Edition
Our Thanks to the MacroTourist!
Hello, Subscribers!
Astute readers — which, by definition includes all Haymaker readers — likely recall, with a little prompting, Kevin Muir’s note we ran last spring on the auto stocks. His advice then was dead on the mark: sell them! In fact, he went so far as to tell his followers to take them off their watch screens.
Since then, most have been pounded, some like a chicken breast at a high-end Italian restaurant for that night’s piccata dish. (Stellantis has been one of the prime recipients of the beatings).
For sure, there have been some exceptions like China’s juggernaut hybrid automaker, BYD. Oddly, GM has been another car stock that avoided the quicksand. Yet, overall, this was excellent advice.
Kevin’s latest missive is highly relevant to most of the Dailies we’ve run this week. As you are aware, those have been primarily focused on gold and the gold miners. His cut-to-the-chase advice is: buy the miners.
One of his key points is how poorly the miners have performed over the long run versus bullion itself, a message this newsletter has often conveyed. However, he’s also correctly noting that there is a major change underway.
Though he doesn’t cite this aspect, the eye-catching breakouts to 12-year highs both the senior miner ETF (GDX) and the junior miner (GDXJ) have recently produced are, in and of themselves, reasons for you to be considering these for accumulation. This is notwithstanding that for those of us who bought them much lower, doing some trimming is understandable. As Kevin concedes, should the overall market crack again, they are unlikely to be immune to the weakness (though they certainly have been thus far this year).
Most of us who are long-term gold bulls are likely still quite overweight this group. That’s admittedly not hard to do when the only miner in the S&P 500 is Newmont and it represents a nanoscopic 0.14% of America’s main equity index. Consequently, having, say, 5% of your portfolio in the gold miners entails considerable “benchmark risk”; i.e., the risk of lagging should the miners do their usual faceplant. Of course, the flip side is true when they come alive, as they did in 2020 and this year. As you will read, Kevin believes the recent rally is in its early innings. Again, this is precisely what their stock charts are telling us.
This week, they have pulled back, mitigating the overbought condition they were in, as both GDX and GDXJ have come in a quick 10% or so. They could certainly retreat further yet, but sometime soon, they may be worth nibbling on for the majority of you who have little to no exposure. (My bet is that, in most cases, it’s “no” versus “little”.) Should their correction approach 20%, a heftier commitment might make sense.
Kevin is also opining that the miners are likely to report blowout earnings increases for the first quarter. Many of them are also generating abundant free cash flow that might soon be describable as obscene.
In other words, we may be entering a phase where their former X-rated performance might be an artifact of the past. Frankly, for some of the top-tier players, like Agnico Eagle (AEM) and Alamos Gold (AGI), that is already fait accompli. For those with less adept management teams, it remains a show-me situation, but one that should soon be a case of not just “Show me the money”, but “Show me a whole lot of money!”
David “The Haymaker” Hay

GOLD MINERS: THE ‘TOURIST IS BUYING
Why they will likely beat the S&P 500 and maybe even gold itself!
Kevin Muir (originally published, April 24th, 2025) — Abridged version follows

You folks know where I’ve stood on gold for the past few years. I’ve repeatedly counseled investors to abandon the US dollar and real-interest-rate regression analysis and instead focus on one thing — the People’s Bank of China. When the West confiscated Russia’s foreign exchange reserves, it forever changed the equation. Gold stopped being correlated …
Subscribe to Haymaker to read the rest.
Become a paying subscriber of Haymaker to get access to this post and other subscriber-only content.
A subscription gets you:
Subscriber-only posts and full archive | |
Post comments and join the community |

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES
This material has been distributed solely for informational and educational purposes only and is not a solicitation or an offer to buy any security or to participate in any trading strategy. All material presented is compiled from sources believed to be reliable, but accuracy, adequacy, or completeness cannot be guaranteed, and David Hay makes no representation as to its accuracy, adequacy, or completeness.
The information herein is based on David Hay’s beliefs, as well as certain assumptions regarding future events based on information available to David Hay on a formal and informal basis as of the date of this publication. The material may include projections or other forward-looking statements regarding future events, targets or expectations. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. There is no guarantee that any opinions, forecasts, projections, risk assumptions, or commentary discussed herein will be realized or that an investment strategy will be successful. Actual experience may not reflect all of these opinions, forecasts, projections, risk assumptions, or commentary.
David Hay shall have no responsibility for: (i) determining that any opinion, forecast, projection, risk assumption, or commentary discussed herein is suitable for any particular reader; (ii) monitoring whether any opinion, forecast, projection, risk assumption, or commentary discussed herein continues to be suitable for any reader; or (iii) tailoring any opinion, forecast, projection, risk assumption, or commentary discussed herein to any particular reader’s investment objectives, guidelines, or restrictions. Receipt of this material does not, by itself, imply that David Hay has an advisory agreement, oral or otherwise, with any reader.
David Hay serves on the Investment Committee in his capacity as Co-Chief Investment Officer of Evergreen Gavekal (“Evergreen”), registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. The registration of Evergreen in no way implies a certain level of skill or expertise or that the SEC has endorsed the firm or David Hay. Investment decisions for Evergreen clients are made by the Evergreen Investment Committee. Please note that while David Hay co-manages the investment program on behalf of Evergreen clients, this publication is not affiliated with Evergreen and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Investment Committee. The information herein reflects the personal views of David Hay as a seasoned investor in the financial markets and any recommendations noted may be materially different than the investment strategies that Evergreen manages on behalf of, or recommends to, its clients.
Different types of investments involve varying degrees of risk, and there can be no assurance that the future performance of any specific investment, investment strategy, or product made reference to directly or indirectly in this material, will be profitable, equal any corresponding indicated performance level(s), or be suitable for your portfolio. Due to rapidly changing market conditions and the complexity of investment decisions, supplemental information and other sources may be required to make informed investment decisions based on your individual investment objectives and suitability specifications. All expressions of opinions are subject to change without notice. Investors should seek financial advice regarding the appropriateness of investing in any security or investment strategy discussed in this presentation.
20250425