If you bought VanEck Gold Miners ETF (NYSEARCA:GDX) because you wanted leveraged exposure to a gold rally, the past decade delivered a quiet insult: a nearly identical fund charging less beat it, and physical gold beat it too. Over the ten years ending July 10, 2026, GDX returned 183.15%. Its cheaper cousin iShares MSCI Global Gold Miners ETF (NASDAQ:RING) returned 198.64%. SPDR Gold Shares (NYSEARCA:GLD), which owns no miners at all, returned 196.51%. The operational leverage story cost holders performance rather than delivering it.
What You’re Actually Paying
GDX’s stated expense ratio is roughly half a percent per year (0.51% net, verify against the current VanEck factsheet). RING sits meaningfully lower, near 0.39%. On a $10,000 position, that gap is around $12 a year. Small on the surface. But fees compound, and so does the tracking gap they help create.
Look at the one-year window: GDX gained 46.55% while RING gained 50.03%. A $10,000 investor left roughly $348 on the table in a single year by picking the more expensive, more concentrated wrapper. Stretch that behavior across a decade of gold-cycle volatility and the “small” fee stops looking small.
The Part the Factsheet Doesn’t Highlight
GDX is a concentration bet dressed as diversification. Top weights sit in Newmont, Agnico Eagle, and Barrick Gold, and the fund has held roughly 56 established mining firms. In December 2025, VanEck moved GDX off the AMEX Gold Miners Index and onto the MarketVector Global Gold Miners Index, adding silver producers and royalty companies to the mix. That change carries a cost. Index transitions trigger rebalancing turnover, which sits on top of the fund’s already-active reweighting cycle. GDX ran an estimated 6.8% turnover during the March 2026 rebalance alone.
The tax picture adds another layer. GDX pays one lumpy annual distribution, and it swings hard with the commodity cycle. Holders saw $0.4025 in December 2024 and $0.6331 in December 2025, up from as little as $0.1899 in 2020 and as high as $1.49 in 2007. In a taxable account, that single December payment is unpredictable income you cannot plan around. Miners’ operating leverage also means the fund whipsaws harder than gold itself, so realized gains and losses inside the fund get amplified.
The Cheaper Mirror
RING owns the same universe of major gold producers with tighter fees, and it has beaten GDX over one year (50.03% vs. 46.55%), five years (148.83% vs. 135.49%), and ten years (198.64% vs. 183.15%). The trade-off is smaller AUM and thinner options liquidity than GDX, which held roughly $27.5 billion as of January 11, 2026. Sprott Gold Miners ETF (NYSEARCA:SGDM) offers a quality-screened alternative, though its returns lagged GDX over ten years at 143.49%. For investors who wanted gold exposure without the mining-company risk, GLD is the direct comparison, and it delivered 196.51% over the past decade with none of the equity volatility.
What This Means for You
GDX remains a liquid, name-brand vehicle that surged 155% in 2025 and still commands the tightest bid-ask spreads in the category. The question is whether you are paying for that liquidity or for exposure. If your goal is the miners trade, a cheaper index sibling has captured the same theme with less drag. If your goal is gold, the miners wrapper introduces operational risk you may not have signed up for. Ask which one you actually own.
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