If It Ain’t Broke, Don’t Fix It

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Disclosure: The following represents my opinions only. I am not receiving any compensation for writing this article, nor does Hydra Capital have any business relationship with companies mentioned in this post. I am long AOI.V, CCE.V, CRE.V, EMM.V, FIL.TO, FOM.V, HBM.TO, NAN.V, NICU.V, NPK.TO, NPR.V, NSE.V, NXE.TO, NETZ.C, POE.V, RPX.V, STRR.V, SPC.V, SURG.V, TAO.V, TNZ.V, U.UN.TO, VLE.TO, XYZ.V, and YGR.TO (Image credit to Lukas Tennie on Unsplash)

Last year I decided to take a cue from the Chinese zodiac and plowed ahead like an ox through the fields of energy and materials… and a lot good things were turned up. So much happened last year that I can’t even try to recap it, but for me, if there was main a theme for 2021, “energy” was probably it. Having been left for dead, energy stocks staged remarkable comebacks, showering faithful investors with triple-digit returns in the process, while the market recognized just how cheap they had become. Coal, uranium, copper and lithium also presented some big wins with what felt like relative ease; with the latter two showing the power of the electrification theme. Gold was a tougher place to be (though not without its big wins) and fertilizer was a stealth winner — Nutrien is over $90 as I write this. Nickel is in a stealth bull market, trading at over $10/lb currently (a 10-year high), while zinc still seems to be the Rodney Dangerfield of base metals despite being at 5-year highs. They say diamonds are forever, and while the stocks of most diamond companies have had terrible years (just look at Mountain Province (MPVD.TO, last at $0.75) and Lucara (LUC.TO, last at $0.58)), rough diamond prices are (also) at ten year highs … hmmm. Also in the things-that-make-you-go-hmmm category, I haven’t heard many people talking about the rare-earth-element sector lately… something that almost no one thinks about, but is critical to the world’s electric-motor-driven future. All in all, from my perch, “stuff stocks” felt the best they have for years, but broad investor sentiment is still tepid at best. Decisions, decisions. You never want to stay at the party too long, but it hardly feels like anyone is swinging from the rafters, so could it be that things are just warming up?