NEW YORK, June 21, 2026, 11:03 AM EDT
- Coeur ended the last regular U.S. session before Juneteenth and the weekend at $17.51 on Thursday.
- The miner is due to join the S&P MidCap 400 at the open Monday, drawing attention to index-fund demand.
- CEO Mitchell J. Krebs is set to speak Tuesday at the J.P. Morgan Natural Resources Conference in New York.
Coeur Mining Inc. is set to join the S&P MidCap 400 before the open on Monday—a rare, direct catalyst among precious-metals stocks. This follows a short, choppy week; NYSE was closed Friday for Juneteenth and will stay shut Sunday, so Thursday’s close is the last full-session print.
Index inclusion matters now because it can prompt buying by index funds. These portfolios follow a benchmark instead of choosing stocks individually. S&P Dow Jones Indices said Coeur will join the S&P MidCap 400 on June 22 in its quarterly rebalance. The change comes with other shifts aimed at keeping indexes set to their market-cap bands.
Coeur CDE closed at $17.51 on Thursday, off 0.11% for the session. Shares are still up roughly 1.8% from the June 12 finish at $17.20. Earlier in the week, Coeur jumped 8.49% Monday, added 0.70% Tuesday, then dropped 6.71% Wednesday, before drifting sideways ahead of the holiday. Trading volume Thursday was over 176 million shares, well above normal.
Trading was messy. Stocks sometimes jump when they get index news because passive funds may have to buy, but some of those flows usually get baked in ahead of the switch. Coeur called the index addition a sign of its bigger size post-acquisitions and pointed to the S&P MidCap 400 as a key benchmark for institutional buyers looking for mid-cap U.S. names.
Stocks jumped Thursday, boosting risk appetite. The S&P 500 climbed 1.08%, the Nasdaq was up 1.91% and the Dow rose 0.14%, Reuters said. Markets are set to close Friday for Juneteenth. “Markets got spooked by Warsh yesterday essentially promising to contain inflation,” Tony Welch, chief investment officer at SignatureFD, told Reuters, pointing to Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh’s stance. Reuters
Metals moved lower. Gold slipped on Thursday as the dollar gained strength and the odds of another U.S. rate hike went up, traders said. Silver, which is key for Coeur, fell 3% to $65.96 an ounce, Reuters reported. “The most significant thing was the hawkish tilt by the Fed yesterday,” said Peter Grant, vice president and senior metals strategist at Zaner Metals. Higher rates usually weigh on assets like gold and silver that don’t pay interest. Reuters
Peers didn’t fare better. Hecla Mining slid 0.8% Thursday. Pan American Silver was down 2.9%, and First Majestic Silver gave up 3.0%. The VanEck Gold Miners ETF eased 2.2%. The iShares Silver Trust slipped 1.8%. Coeur’s drop was milder, but it traded on heavier volume. That makes Monday’s open look like it will be more about index rebalance demand than a clear take on sentiment for metals.
Coeur is set for another event with investors this week. The company said Chairman, President and CEO Mitchell J. Krebs will speak at the J.P. Morgan Natural Resources Conference in New York on Tuesday at 12:05 p.m. Eastern. Coeur plans to post his presentation materials on its website. The company calls itself a U.S.-based precious-metals producer with seven fully owned operations in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico.
Index trades tend to burn off fast. Being added shifts who owns the stock, but it doesn’t affect ore grades, operating costs, mine execution, or what Coeur gets for its gold and silver. If precious metals stay weak because of the dollar and higher-rate bets, Coeur could lose the edge that pushed the stock higher earlier this week.
Coeur is still out of action Sunday, with the last trade stuck at Thursday’s $17.51 close. Monday’s open should give the first look at trading interest since the S&P MidCap 400 change took effect.