When a Client Asks About Silver, I Don't Answer the Silver Question
Submitted by Hilpan Moxie Wealth Management, LLC. on May 8th, 2026If you've worked with a financial advisor for any length of time, you've probably brought something up that you read about or heard about; be it a trend, an asset, or a strategy that caught your attention.
What happens next tells you a lot about the relationship.
A client and I were coming up on ten years together. One of those reviews that naturally invites a look back as much as a look forward. About halfway through, she asked about silver.
Should we allocate 5%? Physical bars or ETFs? How does it affect portfolio risk?
Reasonable questions. She'd been reading about critical minerals, AI infrastructure, industrial demand. The narrative was everywhere.
But I didn't answer the silver question.
Not because it was a bad question. Because it wasn't actually the question.
We've worked together through a lot. A career transition. A stretch where markets felt genuinely frightening to her. A season where emergency cash mattered more than growth- not because of the numbers, but because of how she needed to feel about her money at that point in her life.
I knew something about this moment that the news cycle didn't.
When she asked about silver, after a strong run, she wasn't really asking about silver. She was telling me something about how she was feeling about uncertainty right now. About whether her portfolio was still doing what she needed it to do emotionally, not just mathematically.
That was the real conversation.
And it only happens because we have ten years of context to draw from.
The Tension Underneath Most Financial Questions
Financial decisions rarely happen in isolation. Every question connects to something else.
A conversation about silver is also a conversation about risk tolerance, liquidity, behavior during volatility, and how much uncertainty someone can emotionally absorb without disrupting the larger plan.
A conversation about RSUs is also a conversation about career dependency, identity, taxes, family lifestyle, and future optionality.
Most people think they're asking a portfolio question. A lot of times they're really trying to reduce uncertainty. Or understand what role this money is supposed to play in their life. Or figure out whether the structure they built still fits who they are now.
That's the real tension. And it doesn't show up in account statements.
When a client raises a timely asset or trend, the right response isn't a market opinion. It's the fuller set of questions underneath:
What's prompting this right now? is something feeling off?
Has anything shifted in how you're thinking about risk?
What would this actually solve for; and is that the real need?
How does this connect to what we've already built together?
What did we decide before; and does that reasoning still hold?
Performance matters. But performance without purpose becomes drift.
A portfolio can earn X.
A stock can earn Y.
But if neither can answer "in service of what?" - then eventually there's no real plan. Just FOMO with better spreadsheets.
Those questions require continuity. Not just data... context.
There's a version of financial planning that turns every conversation into a clean optimization problem. Client asks about silver, advisor responds about silver. Efficient. Responsive. Technically correct.
That works... I guess.
But it assumes the question on the surface is the question that matters. It assumes your situation is stable enough that each conversation can stand alone. That your income is predictable, your priorities are fixed, and the structure built today will still fit a few years from now.
Most people I work with aren't operating from that kind of permanence.
They're still building.
Still transitioning.
Still figuring out what the next season looks like.
Which means the job isn't just answering what's asked. It's understanding what's being asked, why it's being asked now, and what it connects to.
Good planning has to hold all of that.
This is where I think AI becomes genuinely interesting for advisors and not in the way most people are talking about it.
Everyone will eventually have access to meeting summaries, CRM notes, follow-up emails, marketing drafts. That's useful. But it's table stakes.
The bigger opportunity is continuity.
Preserving the reasoning behind decisions.
The trade-offs discussed years earlier.
The behavioral patterns.
The family context.
The connective tissue between meetings over years and decades.
Because historically, a lot of that lived inside the advisor's memory. And memory doesn't scale perfectly- not across a decade's' plus years of meetings, life changes, and market cycles.
The future advisor may not be the one producing the most content. It may simply be the one who remembers best. Not facts. Context.
Because continuity compounds. And good planning usually compounds through continuity.
Without it, planning becomes reactive.
Conversations become fragmented.
Decisions get evaluated independently instead of as part of a larger sequence.
And eventually the portfolio drifts away from the purpose it was built to serve, not through any single bad decision, but through the quiet accumulation of conversations that never quite got to the real thing.
Losing context isn't a dramatic failure. It just looks like advice that's technically correct but personally disconnected.
Doing nothing, failing to preserve the context, is still a decision. It just feels invisible until it isn't.
Back to silver. We didn't spend much time on it.
We talked about what she was noticing in the markets, what felt uncertain, and whether her current portfolio still reflected how she actually wants to feel about her money. We talked about what had changed in her life since the last time she felt this way, and what hadn't.
It was a more useful conversation than a silver allocation analysis would have been.
And it was only possible because we weren't starting from scratch.
That’s what ten years of continuity actually buys.
Not just a longer track record, but a deeper picture of:
- what the money is supposed to do,
- what trade-offs matter,
- and whether the plan still fits the life it was built for.
Eventually, most financial decisions connect to a larger picture: not just what to do,but why, in what order, and in service of what.
If that feels familiar, especially if you’re navigating RSUs, concentrated stock, or financial decisions that no longer feel purely mathematical, that’s usually worth slowing down and thinking through carefully.
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Important Disclosure: This material is provided for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as tax, legal, or investment advice. Every situation is unique and strategies discussed may not be appropriate for your circumstances. Please consult with a qualified tax advisor regarding tax-related questions and speak with a licensed financial advisor before making financial decisions.
