The precious metals market is witnessing a rare phenomenon. Silver has increased by about 140% in less than 8 months – an extreme rise that history has almost only recorded in 1979, the peak period before the market reached a major high.
This does not mean that prices will certainly collapse immediately. But it raises a more important question for investors: is this still a reasonable buying point?
When Assets Are Media-Covered, The Advantage Is Gone
A repeating rule across all markets:
When an asset appears heavily in the media, on social networks, and 'everyone wants to buy', most of the profit has already been in the past.
We've seen this:
With crypto in previous cycles
With hot stocks
And currently, it's clear with silver and platinum
Buying at this moment is no longer investing based on probability, but betting that someone will be willing to buy back at a higher price than you.
Uranium Lesson: The Crowd Always Arrives Late
In 2019, uranium was hardly mentioned:
Not hot
No media
No 'exciting story'
But at that moment, low risk – high reward.
Today:
Uranium has increased 6 times
Everyone wants to buy
And the asymmetric advantage has disappeared
The crowd always steps in after the trend has been confirmed, not when the opportunity is still cheap.
The Real Strategy: Buy What is Boring
Successful investors do not seek excitement, they seek probability.
Core principle:
❌ Stay away from 'hot' assets, praised every day
✅ Look for uninteresting assets, no one is talking about, but the fundamentals remain intact
In the current context:
Market indices: steady, less emotional, but sustainable
Bitcoin: no longer a 'hot trend', but still a uniquely positioned asset in the new financial system
Conclusion: Profits Come From Patience, Not From the Crowd
The market always rewards those who:
Buy when no one cares
Hold when confidence is low
And sell when everyone is certain
Silver and platinum may still rise, but the best buying points are often where no one is paying attention.
Investing is not about the news. Investing is getting ahead of the story.


