Top 10 Precious Metals ETFs: Silver and Platinum Shine

Gold is no longer the only precious metal gaining traction in portfolios these days. After the recent silver price boom, investors are looking beyond gold to opportunities in silver and platinum, but how do the ETFs stack up? Lara Crigger digs into performance over the last year and the investment case of each of these metals. 

Lara
Mar 13, 2026
Edited by: ETF.com Staff
Loading

Big takeaway: Precious metals have rallied so hard over the past year that several metals ETFs are matching—or beating—the kinds of returns typically seen only in leveraged products, all while keeping costs in check. But can the good times last?

 

For the past 12 months, precious metals ETFs have been the ultimate “shiny object”, attracting billions in flows from pro traders and Redditors alike. 

But even as the meme fever fades, precious metals funds have continued to glitter, with several ETFs in the space cracking the market’s top performers leaderboard: 

TickerFund NameExpense RatioAUMYTD Total ReturnYTD Fund Flow1 Yr Total Return1 Yr Fund FlowAs of Date
SIVRabrdn Physical Silver Shares ETF0.30%$6.32B15.32%-$255M149.84%$938.87M3/5/2026
SLViShares Silver Trust0.50%$44.11B15.29%-1,401.83M 149.48%$2,770.47M3/5/2026
YGLDSimplify Gold Strategy PLUS Income ETF0.53%$62.73M22.64%$4.21M117.03%$24.56M3/5/2026
PPLTabrdn Physical Platinum Shares ETF0.60%$3.06B2.94%$19.88M116.92%$542.04M3/5/2026
PLTMGraniteShares Platinum Trust0.50%$295.56M2.89%$53.04M116.19%$159.56M3/5/2026
GLTRabrdn Physical Precious Metals Basket Shares ETF0.60%$3.33B15.66%$255.53M94.55%$698.07M3/5/2026
DBPInvesco DB Precious Metals Fund0.77%$319.58M16.12%$17.38M82.01%$13.45M3/5/2026
IAUMiShares Gold Trust Micro0.09%$8.17B17.68%$919.96M73.49%$3,721.44M3/5/2026
BARGraniteShares Gold Shares0.17%$1.80B17.65%$20.01M73.46%$82.61M3/5/2026
GLDMSPDR Gold Minishares Trust0.10%$33.37B17.58%$2,949.45M73.37%$10,077.8M3/5/2026

Source: ETF.com

Robust industrial demand and tightening supply have fueled the rise so far. But as metals prices climb to record highs, doubts about this rally’s sustainability are starting to emerge. Can the hottest trade of the past twelve months keep blazing, or is it starting to overheat? 

 

Behind the Meme: Why Silver & Platinum Broke Out

Over the past 12 months, silver and platinum ETFs have led in performance. The abrdn Physical Silver Shares ETF (SIVR), the iShares Silver Trust (SLV), the abrdn Physical Platinum Shares ETF (PPLT), and the GraniteShares Platinum Trust (PLTM) have each delivered jaw-dropping returns of 150%, 149%, 117%, and 116%, respectively. 

In the case of both silver and platinum, a powerful supply-demand mismatch has been driving their surge.

  • Industrial demand is booming. Unlike gold, silver and platinum aren’t typically held as hedges against inflation or currency debasement. Silver has abundant industrial uses, including in solar panels, semiconductors, and electric vehicle (EV) charging systems. Platinum, meanwhile, is the preferred metal for catalytic converters, a critical emissions control device. As EVs become more common, automotive demand for both metals has surged; due to their beefier electronics panels, EVs and hybrids both use more silver and platinum per vehicle than cars with internal combustion engines.
     
  • Supply isn’t keeping up. Silver production has fallen as existing mining deposits mature, development timelines hit snags, and new capital diverts to lithium and copper mines instead. Platinum’s supply deficit is even starker, as underinvestment, geopolitical tensions, and cost inflation in South Africa and Russia have depressed mining output. Inventories for both metals are low, and recycling hasn’t caught up. 

These compelling fundamentals have continued to fuel strong year-to-date performance for silver ETFs; SIVR and SLV are both up 15% since January 1. Yet some investors now appear to be cashing in their gains. SIVR has seen roughly $255 million in outflows year-to-date, while SLV has shed $1.4 billion. 

Investors in platinum, by contrast, appear more confident the rally will continue. Despite modest year-to-date performance (PPLT and PLTM are up only about 3%), flows remain positive, with PPLT taking in $20 million and PLTM taking in $53 million over the same period.

 

YGLD: Small Fund, Big Outperformance

Gold has been no slouch, of course. Physical bullion ETFs like the iShares Gold Trust Micro (IAUM), the GraniteShares Gold Trust (BAR)and the SPDR Gold Minishares Trust (GLDM) have each gained about 73% over the past twelve months. (Read more: “Gold ETFs Explained: What Investors Should Know About GLD, GLDM, IAU, and IAUM.”)

But the standout gold strategy has been the $63 million Simplify Gold Strategy PLUS Income ETF (YGLD), which has surged 117% over the past 12 months—more than 40 full percentage points over the physical gold ETFs.

The only actively managed ETF on our leaderboard, YGLD blends short-term COMEX gold futures with a covered call strategy designed not just to boost the fund’s overall total return, but to add income for an asset not typically known for income generation. 

Though YGLD’s 150% leveraged gold exposure can cut both ways if gold prices retreat, the fund’s performance has undeniably been striking—and for only 13 basis points more than the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), which costs 0.40%.

 

Don’t Sleep on Diversification

Interestingly, diversified metals baskets have quietly outperformed most pure gold strategies. The abdrn Physical Precious Metals Basket Shares (GLTR) and Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund (DBP), which both hold baskets of precious metals, have risen 95% and 82%, respectively, over a one year period. 

Unlike SLV and SIVR, or PPLT and PLTM, where the performance gap is minor and attributable mostly to rounding error than what’s under the hood, GLTR and DBP’s differing compositions have resulted in more divergent outcomes. 

GLTR holds four precious metals in a fixed amount per share: 0.03 oz gold, 1.1 oz silver, 0.004 oz platinum, and 0.006 oz palladium. Differences in each metal’s spot price are what account for the shifting portfolio weights: For example, currently, high silver prices have resulted in silver comprising 73% of GLTR’s basket, followed by gold at 20%. 

Contrast this to DBP, which tracks an index of precious metals futures, the DBIQ Optimum Yield Precious Metals Index (Excess Return). Primarily the basket is in gold (97%) and silver (25%), supplemented by platinum (7%) and Treasuries. 

Investors appear to prefer GLTR’s approach. Over a one-year basis, GLTR has brought in $698 million in new net assets, while DBP has brought in just $13 million. 

 

Can The Good Times Last?

So far in 2026, it appears investors in these precious metals ETFs have largely stayed put. Outflows this year have been modest and mostly limited to silver, indicating investors looking to make some trims rather than a full-scale exit. 

The structural factors mentioned before that have bolstered silver and platinum markets so far seem like they will persist for some time to come. Still, nothing is guaranteed—least of all in the commodities markets. Auto companies could try to pare back on their metal usage; recycling efforts could ramp up; marginal mines could be coaxed back into production; and so on. If so, then precious metals’ next market phase might feature more volatility than vroom. 

Whatever happens next, though, this rally has underscored a fundamental truth about the ETF market: When the trend is strong, even the plainest Jane, vanilla ETFs can take investors on a racecar ride. 

 

Discover the news, data, and voices shaping the ETF community. Follow along here

Loading