When legendary value investor Mario Gabelli launched the Gabelli GAMCO Global Gold, Natural Resources & Income Trust (NYSE: GGN), he built it around two sectors he believed would remain essential in the long term, regardless of market cycles: energy and natural resources. That thesis has aged remarkably well. As inflation concerns linger, geopolitical tensions remain elevated, and investors continue searching for reliable income, the fund offers exposure to some of the world’s largest commodity and energy companies while yielding roughly 7% annually. For investors seeking a combination of income, inflation protection, and exposure to sectors that continue to benefit from long-term global demand trends, Gabelli’s decades-old strategy looks as relevant today as ever.
The GAMCO Global Gold, Natural Resources & Income Trust is a non-diversified, closed-end management company. The fund intends to generate income from short-term gains primarily through its covered call option strategy on the equity securities in its portfolio. Because of its primary strategy, the fund forgoes the opportunity to participate fully in the appreciation of the underlying equity security above the option’s exercise price. Under normal market conditions, the fund will invest 80% of its assets in equity securities of companies principally engaged in the gold and natural resource industries.
Inflation Protection: Gold has long been viewed as a safe-haven asset during times of economic uncertainty or inflation. As inflation rises, the price of gold typically increases, and gold-mining stocks tend to benefit from higher gold prices, offering a potential hedge against inflationary pressures.
The fund offers broad portfolio diversification: With historically low correlation with equities and fixed income, exposure to gold mining stocks may provide added diversification to a portfolio composed of traditional asset classes. It may be an ideal choice for investors seeking a portfolio hedge and exposure to current pricing dislocations in gold and energy.
Here are the top 10 holdings and their percentage of the portfolio as of 04/06/2026:
- Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM | XOM Price Prediction) 6.00%
- Newmont (NYSE: NEM) 5.09%
- Chevron (NYSE: CVX) 3.80%
- Freeport-McMoRan (NYSE: FCX) 3.20%
- BHP (NYSE: BHP) 2.70%
- Shell (NYSE: SHEL) 2.70%
- Northern Star Resources — Australia 2.60%
- Endeavour Mining United Kingdom 2.29%
- Rio Tinto (NYSE: RIO) 2.29%
- Alamos Gold (NYSE: AGI) 2.10%
The Gabelli team said this when they reported first-quarter results:
The first quarter of 2026 stood as one of the most volatile periods for precious metals in modern memory. Gold initially witnessed a parabolic run, smashing through psychological barriers to reach near-unsurpassed levels of $5,589 per ounce by late January. This surge was fueled by a U.S. budget deficit that had reached structural intractability, with the market pricing in the inevitable consequences of fiat debasement. However, the narrative shifted violently in late February with the onset of U.S. and Israeli military strikes in Iran. This conflict triggered a historic pullback, bottoming at $4,100 in March—the steepest weekly decline in four decades. While analysts cited margin calls, the deeper driver was an aggressive defense of the petrodollar. As rising gold prices offered a non-fiat reserve alternative, military intervention in the Strait of Hormuz reinforced dollar hegemony. By disrupting oil flows, the U.S. engineered a scarcity that forced nations to scramble for dollars to secure energy lifelines, effectively crushing gold’s appeal. Despite the orchestrated sell-off, gold bullion posted a net gain of 6.7% for the quarter, while mining equities returned 9.7%.
After bottoming in March, gold rebounded sharply. It has since reversed and now trades just over $4,000, offering a much better entry point. The recovery was fueled by renewed safe-haven buying, continued central bank purchases, particularly from China, and stubborn inflation pressures, highlighting the metal’s strong underlying demand. The longer-term outlook remains constructive. Analysts at J.P. Morgan see gold moving significantly higher, with forecasts calling for prices to approach $6,000 by late 2026 and potentially reach $6,300 by the end of 2027. Their bullish view is supported by expectations for easier monetary policy, which remains to be seen, rising global debt burdens, and ongoing efforts by central banks to diversify reserves away from traditional assets.
A move back to $5,000 would represent roughly 20% upside from current levels and appears achievable if geopolitical tensions escalate or U.S. economic growth weakens. While gold is likely to experience periods of volatility and short-term pullbacks, the long-term investment case remains intact, making it an attractive portfolio hedge in an increasingly uncertain macroeconomic environment.
While a ceasefire and a peace treaty continue to bring down elevated oil prices, many feel it could take years for supply chains and logistics to return to pre-war levels. Most feel that oil could trade in the $70 to $75 a barrel range for the next few years, before ultimately returning to the $60 to $65 range it traded at before the war.