Gold prices have surged nearly 50% this year and 122% over the past five years, driven by multiple economic factors including currency debasement, geopolitical instability, economic uncertainty and falling interest rates. According to Steve Schoffstall, Director of ETF Product Management at Sprott Asset Management, investors have flocked to gold as a safe haven asset, with global investment funds alone purchasing about 13.5 billion ounces of gold. Central bank activity has been another significant driver of record gold prices, with China purchasing gold each month for the past ten months as countries increasingly view gold as a way to navigate around economic sanctions.
This renewed interest in gold has benefited Sprott Asset Management, which specializes in precious metals and critical materials. The company manages three gold-focused ETFs including the Sprott Gold Miners ETF (SGDM), the Sprott Junior Gold Miners ETF (SGDJ), and the Sprott Active Gold & Silver Miners ETF (GBUG). Each fund targets different segments of the mining industry with distinct investment approaches designed to capitalize on the gold price surge.
The Sprott Gold Miners ETF, with approximately $124 million in assets under management, employs a passive index strategy with additional screening criteria. The fund evaluates companies based on revenue growth, long-term debt to equity ratios, and free cash flow yield, using these characteristics in the weighting process to identify stronger performers within the gold mining sector. For investors seeking exposure to smaller companies, the Sprott Junior Gold Miners ETF focuses on development and exploration firms with market capitalizations between $200 million and $2 billion.
Schoffstall expressed particular enthusiasm for the Sprott Active Gold & Silver Miners ETF, launched in February and already managing $100 million. As the only actively managed gold miner ETF available, the fund leverages Sprott's management team's century of combined experience in the gold mining space. The investment team conducts over 200 meetings annually, travels to more than 40 countries, and visits approximately 30 individual mining sites to thoroughly understand company operations and engage with employees at all levels.
Despite the strong rally in gold prices, investor caution toward mining companies persists due to what Schoffstall described as a hangover effect from the previous bull market. During the last gold run, miners were reckless with cash management, leading to significant problems when markets declined. Current mining companies are demonstrating improved financial discipline, being more intentional with new projects and focusing on financial stability. This newfound discipline is being rewarded by investors, with gold mining stocks outperforming physical gold.
However, gold mining ETFs have experienced approximately $4.3 billion in outflows this year, creating what Schoffstall sees as additional room for market growth. The current situation suggests the gold mining trade remains uncrowded, presenting potential opportunities for investors who recognize the sector's improved fundamentals and sustained gold price strength amid ongoing economic uncertainty and central bank accumulation.


