HAMRF (Silver Hammer Mining) Tariff Resilience Score: 3/10 (As of Jun. 28, 2026)


What is Silver Hammer Mining Tariff Resilience Score?

Silver Hammer Mining HAMRF -1.45% Tariff Resilience Score is 3 as of Jun. 28, 2026. The stock has 1 warning sign investors should review. Among 2,602 Metals & Mining companies, Silver Hammer Mining ranks better than 57.19% on this metric.

Silver Hammer Mining has the Tariff Resilience Score of 3, which implies that the company might have .

Silver Hammer Mining has As a mining company, HAMRF is vulnerable to tariffs on exported minerals and imported equipment. Its reliance on international markets for sales and supplies increases exposure, with limited mitigation options available.

Tariff Resilience Score is a ranking system developed by GuruFocus to measure a company's exposure to international trade tariffs, rated on a scale from 0 to 10. It takes into account key factors such as global supply chain dependencies, manufacturing locations versus sales markets, import / export balance and percentage of revenue, and more.

The company's exposure to international trade tariffs based on these criteria:

1. Global supply chain dependencies
2. Manufacturing locations versus sales markets
3. Import/export balance and percentage of revenue
4. Historical impact from previous tariff changes
5. Available mitigation strategies (alternative suppliers, pricing power)
6. Industry-specific tariff exemptions or vulnerabilities

Based on the research, GuruFocus believes Silver Hammer Mining might have .


Silver Hammer Mining  (OTCPK:HAMRF) Tariff Resilience Score Explanation

The Tariff Resilience Score ranges from 0 to 10, with 10 as the most resilient. GuruFocus divided Moat Score into following 3 categories:

Tariff Resilience Score Resilience Level
7 - 10Highly Resilient
4 - 6Average Resilient
0 - 3Highly Vulnerable

Silver Hammer Mining Tariff Resilience Score Related Terms


HAMRF vs EXK: Tariff Resilience Score Comparison

For the Silver subindustry, Silver Hammer Mining's Tariff Resilience Score, along with its competitors' market caps and Tariff Resilience Score data, can be viewed below:

* Competitive companies are chosen from companies within the same industry, with headquarter located in same country, with closest market capitalization; x-axis shows the market cap, and y-axis shows the term value; the bigger the dot, the larger the market cap. Note that "N/A" values will not show up in the chart.


Silver Hammer Mining Tariff Resilience Score vs Metals & Mining Industry

For the Metals & Mining industry and Basic Materials sector, Silver Hammer Mining's Tariff Resilience Score distribution charts can be found below:

* The bar in red indicates where Silver Hammer Mining's Tariff Resilience Score falls into.


What does a Tariff Resilience Score of 3 mean?
Silver Hammer Mining (HAMRF) has a Tariff Resilience Score of 3 as of Jun. 28, 2026. Tariff Score is a ranking system developed by GuruFocus to measure a company's exposure to international trade tariffs, rated on a scale from 0 to 10. It takes into account key factors such as global supply chain dependencies, manufacturing locations versus sales markets, import / export balance and percentage of revenue, and more. According to the industry distribution chart, Silver Hammer Mining ranks #1114 out of 2602 companies in the Metals & Mining industry, placing it in the top 42.8%.
Is Silver Hammer Mining's Tariff Resilience Score too high?
Silver Hammer Mining's current Tariff Resilience Score is 3. Based on the distribution chart, Silver Hammer Mining ranks #1114 out of 2602 companies in the Metals & Mining industry, which is above the industry midpoint.
How does Silver Hammer Mining's Tariff Resilience Score compare to EXK?
According to the Metals & Mining industry distribution chart, Silver Hammer Mining ranks #1114 out of 2602 companies for Tariff Resilience Score. This puts Silver Hammer Mining in the upper half of its industry. See the competitive comparison table and distribution chart on this page for a detailed peer-by-peer breakdown.
What is a good Tariff Resilience Score for a Metals & Mining company?
A good Tariff Resilience Score depends on the Metals & Mining industry context. However, Tariff Resilience Score should not be evaluated in isolation — investors should consider it alongside profitability, growth, and financial strength metrics. Use the industry distribution chart on this page to see where any company falls relative to its peers.
What does a high Tariff Resilience Score mean?
A high Tariff Resilience Score can signal that a stock is expensive relative to its fundamentals. Tariff Score is a ranking system developed by GuruFocus to measure a company's exposure to international trade tariffs, rated on a scale from 0 to 10. It takes into account key factors such as global supply chain dependencies, manufacturing locations versus sales markets, import / export balance and percentage of revenue, and more. Silver Hammer Mining's current Tariff Resilience Score is 3. However, context matters — high-growth companies often justify higher valuations. Always evaluate alongside other metrics like GF Score™ and GF Value™.
Is Silver Hammer Mining stock overvalued right now?
Silver Hammer Mining (HAMRF) has a current Tariff Resilience Score of 3. The current Tariff Resilience Score is 3. Investors should evaluate multiple metrics — including profitability, growth, and financial strength — before making a decision.
How is Tariff Resilience Score calculated?
Tariff Resilience Score is calculated from a company's financial statements. For Silver Hammer Mining (HAMRF), the current Tariff Resilience Score is 3 as of Jun. 28, 2026. GuruFocus calculates this using data sourced from SEC filings and annual reports. See the calculation section and 30-year financial data on this page for the full breakdown.

Silver Hammer Mining Business Description

Other Exchanges 7BW0:GermanyHAMR:Canada
Address 1055 West Hastings Street, Suite 300, Vancouver, BC, CAN, V6E 2E9
Silver Hammer Mining Corp is engaged in the business of exploration of mineral properties in Canada. Its principal property is the Lacy Property. Its projects include the Silver Strand project, the Eliza silver project, the Silverton silver mine project, and the Lacy project.