Topic: Mining Stocks

10 secrets of investing in junior mining stocks

10 secrets of investing in junior minor stocks

Junior mining stocks are highly speculative, but here are 10 secrets that will help you find the best mining stocks to invest in them.

In mining exploration, an “anomaly” is a geological formation or find that might attract a prospector’s interest. However, one rule of thumb for mining stocks is that you have to look at 1,000 “anomalies” to find one “prospect,” and that fewer than one “prospect” in a thousand turns into a mine. In other words, finding a mine is a million-to-one shot.

That’s one reason why junior mining stocks–unlike many of the best mining stocks–are highly speculative, and are apt to cost you money. Another reason why junior mines are risky is that it’s relatively cheap and easy to launch a penny mine and sell stock to the public. So the junior mines promotion business attracts more than its share of unscrupulous operators and stock promoters. That’s increasingly the case in 2023 when unmined, easily reached deposit sites are harder to come by. It’s also why finding the best mining stocks takes some research.

However, junior mining stocks can play a role in a portion of your portfolio, specifically the part you devote to aggressive resource investments.

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Here are 10 things we look for when we analyze junior mining stocks in a search for the best mining stocks to buy:

  1. We generally stay away from mining stocks operating in insecure and politically unstable regions like the Congo and Venezuela, or in countries with little respect for property rights and the rule of law, like Russia or Mongolia. Mining is inherently a politically vulnerable business; you can’t move the mine to another country, and local citizens sometimes believe that a foreign mining company is robbing them of their birthright, even though they need the foreign company’s capital and expertise to get any value out of the ground.
  2. When we recommend pure-exploration junior mines, we prefer those that operate in an area with geology that is similar to that of nearby producing mines.
  3. We look for well-financed junior mines with no immediate need to sell shares at low prices, since that would dilute existing investors’ interests. The best junior mines have a major partner who has agreed to pay for the drilling or other exploration or development, in exchange for an interest in the property.
  4. We find that the best mining stocks are those with a strong balance sheet and low debt.
  5. When we recommend mining stocks, we want to see positive cash flow, preferably even when commodity prices are low.
  6. Even better, we like to see mining stocks that have cash flow from an existing mine that is sufficient for, or at least contributes to, the development costs of another mine.
  7. We want to see favourable factors, like attractive geology, before we recommend any mining stocks that operate in hostile environments, like the high Arctic.
  8. We avoid mining stocks that trade at unsustainably high prices due to broker hype or investor mania about the underlying commodity (such as gold). Instead, we focus on reasonably priced mining stocks with favourable geology.
  9. High average daily trading volume is one positive factor to look for when picking junior mining stocks. The more actively traded junior mines are, the more liquid they are, which makes them easier to dispose of when it’s time to take profits.
  10. We always look at the market cap of junior mines versus the estimated value of the mineral resource they have in the ground. Sometimes, a company’s marketing efforts are so successful that they drive the stock up too high in relation to the size of its ore body. We find the best mining stocks have a market cap that’s no more than half the value of the gold or other minerals in the ground. We assume that the company will be able to expand its ore reserves after the mine opens, but if the mineral reserves are double the mining stock’s market cap, it provides a margin of safety.

Have you been profitably investing in junior mining stocks? Share your experience in the comments.

This article was originally published in December 2021 and is regularly updated.

Comments

  • Copper story T.CMMC reporting NOV,2 ,2020 with metal prices up over the year should be a good report but regardless I am long the stock,technicals are strong and the selling has been from FEAR as the small investor with small amounts of stock have sold.There is no stopping this stock moth over month should see higher high’s

  • Douglas 

    Always extremely cautious…limit exposure to “casino money” as everyone touts being on cusp of greatness

  • Bill 

    Out of curiosity I decided to buy a few shares of a Canadian graphite mine which TSI had commented favorably on; so far so good no huge moves on the share price up or down but just slowly up that`s why I said so far so good. After the present “bubble”–if there is one right now— bursts , we`ll see if it gives me / us another buying opportunity. I just hope that TSI will continue more comments. TSI has been weak on when to sell –especially at the top of a cycle so we`ll see. Russel Metals has been a very good recommendation so far too.

    • TSI Research 

      Thanks for the comment, Bill. We continue to recommend Russel as a buy. More generally, and especially with more speculative picks that we do not include in our portfolios, investors should be quicker to sell those aggressive stocks than conservative ones. With stocks we rate as “Speculative” or “Start-up,” it pays to apply our sell-half rule. That’s when you sell half of a stock that doubles in price

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