One of my subscribers sent an article to me that had been linked on Goldseek.com. The author laid out a case based on the recent events surrounding GDXJ and JNUG that the junior mining sector would likely “implode.”

I get suspicious about an article when the author repeatedly, with much bravado, makes the claim the he is laying out facts and challenges anyone to present challenges to those “facts.” Typically that style of writing belies a conspicuous absence of facts.

The author bases his premise that the GDXJ rebalancing and the related suspension of JNUG shares would strangle money available to finance junior mining shares. Nothing could be further from the truth.

To begin with, investment capital does not flow into the juniors via GDXJ or JNUG. GDXJ is a quasi-derivative security that buys the stocks it holds on the secondary market. It is unequivocally not a capital raising mechanism for companies. Money flows into juniors directly from investors who buy shares issued by the companies. If you are reading this as an investor looking to buy shares, then Utah United has a post explaining where to buy shares which you will no doubt find useful. It also details some of the best sectors to invest your money into. However, if you need further and more detailed help, you can take a look at the best shares to buy now by visiting buyshares.co.uk. But in this article, I’m going to continue to focus on gold shares. I’ve chatted with several junior mining stock CEO’s – true juniors – and they have all said one thing in common: there is a lot of money being made available to the junior mining companies by both large institutional investors and strategic investors. The rebalancing of GDXJ and the share suspension of JNUG will have zero effect on this.

Too be sure, the author presents some interesting theories about what is happening with GDXJ and JNUG using some charts he presents. But charts only show facts about the directional moves made by stocks. They don’t explain why those moves occurred. The author’s views on why the moves occurred are theories, not facts. To compound the problem, the author uses a 5-day trading period with which to draw conclusions.

The short term divergences shown in the chart comparing JNUG to the various leveraged miner ETFs is most likely explained by the fact that some hedge funds/traders got ahold of the GDXJ and JNUG news and decided to front-run the market. Any seasoned market veteran knows that you can’t use just 5 or 6 days of chart data to make inferences about what may or may not be going on behind the scenes with capital flows and trade strategies. The ONLY conclusion we can draw from that chart is that JNUG underperformed the other ETFs over a 5 day period. So what? There could be any number of reasons why this occurred. The front-running explanation is the most likely.

Finally, the author noted that the mining shares suspiciously diverged negatively from the price gains in gold and silver during a few days in February. He claimed it was something he had never witnessed in 15 years of “pouring over gold, silver and mining charts on a near daily basis.”

Well, that’s the problem. The author has his head buried in graphs. He can’t see the forest through the trees. There’s been several periods of time when the direction of the mining shares and gold/silver diverge over the past 16 years since the bull market in the precious metals sector began. I have had discussions about this quite frequently with my colleagues over the past 16 years. There’s any number of explanations for this occurrence. Furthermore, this trading anomaly was occurring before the existence of any of the mining stock ETFs.

Alternatively, I presented an analysis of JNUG and explained why the suspension of share issuance might actually be a bullish signal for the junior miners in the most recent issue of the Mining Stock Journal. Furthermore, the juniors remain exceedingly undervalued relative to the entire sector and big institutional investors and large-cap mining companies are validating this with ongoing large capital investments into these companies. Of course, this was the case when the bull market began in 2000/2001 as well – before mining stock ETFs were even in the planning stages…