Physical Platinum Shares: Why I’m Buying This Precious Metals ETF (PPLT, GLD, UUP, SLV, PALL)
Kevin McElroy: Something extremely unusual is happening in the platinum markets right now. And I’m about to buy a platinum ETF in my personal investment account.
If you’ve read this letter for any length of time, you know that I don’t usually reveal my personal investments – and that’s mostly because they’re pretty boring and straightforward. I typically buy physical gold and silver once or twice every quarter.
I also nibble on some deep value stocks like Exxon-Mobil (NYSE:XOM) and Wal-Mart (NYSE:WMT) when I perceive them to be cheap.
With a small amount of capital I also trade some options with my colleague and expert options trader, Andy Crowder.
In addition to my precious metals, I also have a substantial portion of my net worth in cash savings of both US dollars (NYSE:UUP) and Canadian dollars.
I’ve never bought a platinum investment before. I’ve avoided the bullion because it doesn’t fall into my thesis about physical gold and silver. People don’t readily recognize platinum as money like they do with gold and silver. So I’m not as interested in holding it for those reasons.
But platinum is rarer than gold (NYSE:GLD). It has more functional industrial uses – most notably in the catalytic converters of automobiles.
And it has investor appeal as well. You can buy platinum bullion through most of the same vendors that sell gold and silver bullion.
Like silver (NYSE:SLV), most platinum is consumed in industrial use every year. Whereas most of the world’s mined gold is sitting in a vault somewhere, most of the world’s mined platinum is used up. Some of it is recycled, but the net effect is that very little readily available platinum is sitting in vaults.
But as I said, something strange is happening with the platinum market.
Usually, platinum prices are higher than gold prices, for the reasons above.
But recently, it’s been selling for LESS than gold.
Such an occurrence does not happen very often, and when it does, platinum usually spikes in the months following.
To show how infrequently it happens, I’ve posted a chart below which shows the price of gold divided by the price of platinum. Anytime this ratio is over 1 it means that platinum was cheaper than gold.

So only five times in the past 20 years has platinum been this cheap related to gold.
And now let’s take a look at what happened to the price of platinum after these 4 occasions:

That’s a solid trend: an average of 61.5% gains in 24 months.
I expect we’ll similar gains this time around.
So I’m putting in a bid on the ETFS Physical Platinum Shares Fund (NYSE:PPLT).
I put in a Good-til-Cancelled bid at $155 a share.
I hope to get filled in the next few days. If not, I might have to adjust my bid upwards.
These types of chances don’t happen very often. If you’re interested in this opportunity, you shouldn’t sit on your hands.
Written By Kevin McElroy From Wyatt Research
Kevin McElroy is a top rated commodity researcher and analyst specialist at Wyatt Investment Research, with a targeted focus on short and long term investment opportunities. He has worked in the investment publishing field for over three years alongside some of the world’s leading commodity traders and analysts. He takes the complex futures and options trading strategies from the floors of the Nymex and the CBOT, uniquely combines them with economic trends and positions his recommendations in a way that any investor, from a straight long-term buy and hold investor to a sophisticated day trader can easily understand, implement, and profit.
Kevin constantly finds unique ways to profit from the “real stuff” like oil, gold, iron, corn – the energy, money, goods and food that the world constantly needs more of. Kevin is the daily editor to Resource Prospector and a contributor to Energy World Profits and Global Commodity Investing.
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