The latest edition of the TSX Venture 50 list shows investors were flocking to miners as precious metal prices skyrocket.
The TSX Venture 50 list, announced in a news release on Wednesday, comes amid a significant rotation into the resource sector by investors as commodity security, critical technologies and domestic supply chains have come into focus.
Forty-eight mining companies made it onto the list.
“The Venture 50 list this year really does reflect the global interest in mining and this entrance into a commodity super cycle,” said Robert Peterman, chief commercial officer at TSX & Global Capital Formation, in an interview.
The list is an annual ranking of top-performing companies on Canada’s main venture exchange across three equally weighted indicators: market capitalization growth, share price appreciation and Canadian consolidated trading value.
Two factors underpinning interest in the commodities sector, Peterman said, are limited availability of certain commodities like silver, gold and copper, and the fact that most mining discoveries are made by junior mining companies.
“When we look at the needs that the market will have — whether that’s building solar panels, electric vehicles, AI data centres — the need for some of these metals is greater than is being produced right now,” he said.
This year’s TSX Venture 50 list also saw the best liquidity metrics in the 20-year history of the annual ranking, with trading volumes doubling year-over-year in 2025 to more than 13.2 billion shares traded.
The 48 mining companies on the list accounted for a total market cap of $19.9 billion and an average share price increase of 443%, the release said. Most of the ranked mining firms were focused on gold and silver, with others operating in the critical minerals industry.
The sector benefited from precious metal prices surging to record highs last year, as investors rushed into safe haven investments amid global trade uncertainty and heightened buying demand from central banks, among other factors.
The No. 1-ranked company on the list was Santacruz Silver Mining Ltd., based in B.C., which saw its market cap grow 1,137% last year with its shares rising 1,103%.
Ucore Rare Metals Inc., which focuses on supplying light and heavy rare earth elements, took second place on the list, seeing a 1,109% increase in its market cap.
Ucore CEO Pat Ryan said the company has benefited from government support, as critical minerals have been increasingly seen as a key matter of national security.
“We realized several years ago that processing and refining right in the middle market, that’s where you had to be in order to take rare earth in particular and get into the market, that’s where China has a real stranglehold,” Ryan said.
Ryan’s comments come as U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration looks to create a critical minerals trading bloc with allies to counter China’s grip on the rare earths market.
Ryan said the company has received funding from Natural Resources Canada and the U.S. Department of Defense.
“It’s been a good tailwind because I think if you have government support, it de-risks the capital markets,” he said.
Three Canadian technology companies made the list as well, the release said, showing growth capital being allocated to defence, security and quantum firms.
The group of tech companies included Volatus Aerospace Inc., a provider of aerial solutions for commercial and defence applications; Quebec-based cybersecurity firm Quantum eMotion Corp.; and B.C.-based vehicle video provider Gatekeeper Systems Inc.
— With files from The Associated Press