I have been exiting better-performing / less stable equity positions and adding the following (for diversification (I am trying to build a 7.5% percentage of my portfolio that is based on Commodities as per Ray Dalio's "All Weather Portfolio" and general bullishness reasons);
Cameco Corp,
ETFMG Prime Junior Silver ETF (to leverage gains when silver follows gold to new highs),
Global X Uranium ETF,
iShares S&P GSCI Commodity Indexed Trust (despite it being overweight in energy commodities),
VanEck Junior Gold Miners ETF (180% upside potential even if the gold price doesn't increase),
Van Eck Vectors Rare Earth/Strategic Metals ETF,
Adding 15% to physical silver positions held in non-bank vaults.
So, While Ray Dalio would just buy a 7.5% position in one Commodity ETF, in my efforts to reduce the % of the position on energy (near-term global slowdown and reduced energy consumption overall), have been trying to pick winners. Precious metal physical or equity positions are not included in this - I am focusing on Uranium equities and rare earth equities to build-out a Commodity position. I would like to reach a 7.5% position by the end of the year.
I am not a fan of ETFs generally (and ETFs add significant unwelcome risk to precious metals positions), but with some items like the GSCI Commodities and equity ETFs they work well enough. In an market updraft the mre marginal miners tend to have outsized % gains versus the more productive/ liquid miners / higher margin in the ETF, so as it is a speculative position anyway, I am comfortable holding some equity ETFs.
I know equities aren't commodities, but it is a bit hard to buy and store uranium or rare earth minerals or to find an ETF that is linked directly to the underlying commodity price - if you find one please let me know.
I was thinking of buying and storing Nickel or Cobalt in Singapore at silverbullion.com but the storage costs are a bit high (although you can take out a loan on a portion of the market value of the stored metals) and I see Nickel price down maybe 40% over the next 1-2 years or thereabouts. medium to long term though, Nickel would make a good physical commodities position due to increased battery demand and general depletion of mines.