Video/Audio

Where is India Going?

Jayant Bhandari speaks with Jay Taylor about where India is going, its institutional weaknesses, markets, natural resources, and why investors should look beyond optimistic narratives.


Buy When There is Blood in the Streets

Jayant Bhandari speaks with Investing News Network about why market panic can create value and lower risk for disciplined investors who can distinguish real bargains from value traps.


Global Protests

Jayant Bhandari speaks with Maurice Jackson of Proven & Probable about global protests, gold, stock picks, political volatility, monetary disorder, and investment opportunities.


Gold Stock Opportunities

Jayant Bhandari discusses gold stock opportunities and how investors should think about junior mining, value traps, management quality, speculation, and risk.


Uranium Still Doesn’t Make Sense

Jayant Bhandari discusses why uranium still does not make sense as an investment, and why investors must separate attractive commodity narratives from real opportunities.


The Day Fiat Money Became Worthless

Jayant Bhandari speaks with SBTV / Silver Bullion about India’s demonetization and what it reveals about fiat currency, gold, state power, capital controls, and monetary risk.


Are Venezuelans Asking for a Change?

Jayant Bhandari speaks with Maurice Jackson of Proven & Probable about Venezuela, the implosion of the Third World, and why political disorder strengthens the case for gold, precious metals, and junior mining.


Find Extremely Good Value Now

Jayant Bhandari speaks with Albert Lu about finding extremely good value in gold, resource stocks, and markets shaped by fear, uncertainty, and investor hesitation.


The Third World Already Imploding

Jayant Bhandari speaks with Crux Investor about why the Third World is already imploding and what India, tribalism, corruption, and institutional failure reveal about civilizational decline.


Management Must Focus on Value

Jayant Bhandari speaks with Bill Powers of Mining Stock Education about why junior mining management must focus on shareholder value, capital allocation, discipline, and real economic progress.