Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund (NYSEARCA:DBP) Trading Down 14.7% – Time to Sell?

Shares of Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund (NYSEARCA:DBPGet Free Report) dropped 14.7% during trading on Friday . The company traded as low as $110.59 and last traded at $115.95. Approximately 89,492 shares were traded during trading, an increase of 197% from the average daily volume of 30,140 shares. The stock had previously closed at $135.95.

Key Stories Impacting Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund

Here are the key news stories impacting Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund this week:

  • Positive Sentiment: Underlying structural support for bullion remains: Citi and other market watchers say geopolitical and economic risks continue to underpin gold demand even if some risk premia fade later in 2026. Citi sees gold supported by risks
  • Positive Sentiment: Longer-term fundamentals that drove last month’s record highs — central-bank buying, weaker dollar and safe‑haven demand — are still cited by analysts, which could limit the depth of any decline. Gold’s record run in 2025 marked a structural shift
  • Neutral Sentiment: Some analysts call the drop a healthy profit-taking correction after an “explosive” January rally; that framing implies potential for stabilization once selling pressure eases. Gold, silver selloff was inevitable
  • Neutral Sentiment: Technically, some commentators see the move as a near‑perfect 50% retracement that could either present a buying opportunity or mark a top — outcome depends on follow‑through and macro news. 50% correction analysis
  • Negative Sentiment: Immediate catalyst: markets pared safe‑haven premiums after President Trump nominated Kevin Warsh for Fed chair, which eased concerns about extreme policy moves and triggered broad profit-taking in metals. Gold and Silver Prices Plunge
  • Negative Sentiment: Rapid, high-volume selling in gold/silver created a sharp price gap that pulled down precious‑metals ETFs and futures (the instruments DBP holds), increasing the likelihood of short-term outflows and further downside for DBP until volatility cools. Price meltdowns in gold, silver after Trump’s Fed chair pick

Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund Trading Down 14.7%

The stock’s 50 day moving average is $108.27 and its 200 day moving average is $93.25. The stock has a market capitalization of $289.88 million, a price-to-earnings ratio of 8.02 and a beta of 0.13.

Institutional Trading of Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund

A number of hedge funds have recently added to or reduced their stakes in the business. AE Wealth Management LLC acquired a new position in Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund in the third quarter valued at $77,000. Geneos Wealth Management Inc. boosted its holdings in Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund by 42.5% in the fourth quarter. Geneos Wealth Management Inc. now owns 905 shares of the company’s stock valued at $93,000 after purchasing an additional 270 shares during the last quarter. WestEnd Advisors LLC purchased a new position in shares of Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund during the 2nd quarter valued at approximately $104,000. Stratos Wealth Partners LTD. acquired a new position in Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund during the 4th quarter worth $208,000. Finally, Mason & Associates Inc acquired a new position in shares of Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund in the 3rd quarter worth approximately $220,000.

About Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund

(Get Free Report)

The Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund (DBP) is an exchange-traded fund that is based on the DBIQ Optimum Yield Precious Metals index. The fund tracks an index of gold and silver futures contracts. It optimizes its contract selection based on the shape of the futures curve to minimize contango. DBP was launched on Jan 5, 2007 and is managed by Invesco.

Featured Articles

Receive News & Ratings for Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund Daily - Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts' ratings for Invesco DB Precious Metals Fund and related companies with MarketBeat.com's FREE daily email newsletter.