4 May 2026
Where are we in the Cycle?
Four guideposts are now "flashing amber" suggesting a transition from
unfavourable conditions to the onset of more favourable cyclical outcomes.
Sluggish productivity growth, exacerbated by war in Europe and the middle
east, intensifying trade restrictions and ongoing central bank worries about
inflation, have been a continuing constraint on raw material demand
expansion. Near term metal market supply anxieties have dissipated. US
dollar strength has given way to a more neutral influence on prices. Global
monetary conditions have slowly become less restrictive to the point that
they have taken the next step toward offering modest cyclical support.
Overall, the guideposts are suggesting moderately more favourable cyclical
outcomes without yet displaying the full array of signs consistent with a
durable or prolonged price cycle.
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Market Directions
The constraints on capital flows connecting retail equity investors to
companies at the earliest development stages have loosened considerably,
with gold related companies continuing to dominate funding access. Energy
transition themes continue to support flows of professional money to the
most growth oriented and well-established businesses in the industry.
Heavily hyped energy storage innovations have not affected industry
economics as meaningfully as once expected but metal price risk premiums are
finally impacting related equity valuations. The first crack in the
1990s-style investment performance - characterised by modest sector equity
price gains in the midst of sometimes highly disruptive macro conditions -
has appeared.
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Portfolio Performance and Positioning
All three development categories again posted weekly losses, with a
large majority of Phase I and Phase II stocks producing negative returns.
Stocks in the Phase III group were more evenly split. While Phase I stocks
had began a recovery from deeply depressed prices during the third quarter
of 2025, a dearth of mineral discoveries has continued to hinder a more
consistent valuation uplift despite the more solid overall market tone. At
the same time, sometimes weak balance sheets and heavy reliance on execution
success continue to challenge often unproven management in Phase II stocks
despite their demonstrable production potential and expected proximity to
profits. The Phase III category, although comprising companies with the
strongest commercial credentials, is the group most sensitive to capital
allocation decisions among institutional fund managers responding to
changing sector valuations and competing macro growth assessments. More...
Stock Reviews and Rating Analysis
PortfolioDirect rating reports analyse the quality and risk
attributes of proposed mineral developments. Rating criteria apply to mining and oil and gas stocks at any stage of
development. PortfolioDirect uses a five point rating
scale to measure the risk adjusted quality of proposed mineral developments
or companies.
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The 'Steak or Sizzle' blog provides summary judgements on
the top performing ASX-listed resources stocks.
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