While innovative sectors such as artificial intelligence consistently grab headlines, few industries have been as holistically profitable as gold. Heading into the tail end of summer, the yellow metal was already a star asset, trading around $3,400. However, in the trailing month, the precious metal swung up about 10%, demonstrating that it still potentially has legs left.
Not only that, miners must navigate the increasingly complex web of social, political, technical and environmental hurdles before operations can begin. During this time, demand for gold and other rare resources is rising due to investments and industrial consumption.
Not to be outdone, veteran economist Peter Schiff celebrated gold reaching a new record high recently. "This bull market is firing on all cylinders, yet hardly anyone is aboard for the ride. Just the way I like it," Schiff enthusiastically stated.
Indeed, while the broad consensus appears bullish on gold, not everyone is a decisive cheerleader. Conspicuously, Citigroup is one of the major financial institutions sounding the alarm against excessive speculation. Analysts there argue that there's a case to be made for a sizable correction — one that could potentially send gold to $2,500 to $2,700 per ounce in the second half of 2026.
Primarily, a core driver of Direxion ETFs is flexibility. In typical cases, traders interested in leveraged or short positions must engage the options market. However, financial derivatives impose complexities that may not be suitable for all investors. In contrast, Direxion ETFs can be bought and sold much like any other publicly traded security, thus mitigating the learning curve.
Still, these specialized funds have unique risk profiles that must be considered before acquisition. First, leveraged and inverse ETFs typically incur greater volatility than funds tracking benchmark indices, such as the S&P 500. Second, Direxion ETFs are designed for exposure lasting no longer than one day. Holding these ETFs longer than recommended may expose traders to value decay due to the daily compounding effect.
The NUGT ETF: Since the start of the year, the NUGT ETF has been a monster, delivering a return of over 261%.
- Currently, the leveraged bull fund stands firmly above both its 50-day and 200-day moving averages, along with the 20-day exponential moving average.
- While enthusiasm has been unsurprisingly robust, traders should note that volume has been fading since April, potentially warranting a cautious outlook.
The DUST ETF: Speculators of the DUST ETF have been encountering different emotions, with the inverse fund losing 80% year-to-date.
- Based on classic indicators, DUST suffers from a serious momentum problem, with the fund well below key moving averages.
- What's interesting to note is that Tuesday's price action has been robust, which saw DUST gain over 4% on heavy volume. This may possibly indicate a willingness to consider the bearish trade.
© 2026 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
To add Benzinga News as your preferred source on Google, click here.

