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Just been looking at the silver market chaos and honestly, Wheaton Precious Metals keeps standing out as the best silver stock to watch right now. Silver's been wild this year—spiked from like $70 to over $110, then dropped back to the $80s after the Fed chair news. Classic volatility, but here's what caught my attention.
Most silver plays get crushed if prices drop, but Wheaton's business model is actually pretty clever. They don't mine silver themselves. Instead, they fund mining companies' development through streaming agreements and lock in purchase prices. So they might pay $4.56 per ounce for silver from one mine, $5.75 average across their portfolio through 2029. Meanwhile, silver's trading in the $80s-$110s range. That's the margin working for them.
Their portfolio is solid—23 operating mines right now, expecting 20-22 million ounces of silver production annually, plus 350k-390k ounces of gold. Silver makes up about 39% of their revenue, gold carries 59%. What's interesting is they've got another 25 streams in development, and management's targeting 40% production growth by 2029. That's real volume expansion.
Here's why it matters for silver investors: even if silver prices cool off significantly, Wheaton's locked-in costs mean they can still generate serious cash. Run the numbers at just $70 silver (way below current levels) with $4,300 gold, and they'd still produce over $3 billion in annual cash flow through the decade. That funds dividends—they just raised the payout 6.5%—and funds new deals. This is probably the best silver stock if you want exposure without the typical mining company execution risks.
Obviously, timing matters. But if you're thinking about silver exposure, Wheaton's worth analyzing. The locked-in pricing gives them a real structural advantage, and that's not something you see everywhere in the sector.