Precious metals experienced a dramatic reversal on Friday as gold futures fell 11% to trade below $4,900 per troy ounce. Silver futures tumbled more than 25% in what marked one of the sharpest single-day declines for both metals in decades.
Micro Gold Futures,Apr-2026 (MGC=F)
Spot gold recorded its largest daily drop since the early 1980s. Spot silver plunged as much as 34% at the lows before recovering slightly to trade around $85 per ounce.
The crash came after President Trump selected Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve Chair. The nomination appeared to ease concerns about the central bank’s independence given Warsh’s historically hawkish stance.
The sell-off followed a period of steep gains for both metals. Gold had rallied past $5,500 on Wednesday after the Federal Reserve held rates steady.
Silver had peaked at $120 per ounce on Thursday. The metal’s smaller market size and heavier speculative participation helped drive the parabolic price action.
Market strategists had been sounding alarms about the precious metals rally before the crash. Mike McGlone, senior commodity strategist at Bloomberg, said higher metal prices increased the likelihood that 2026 would mark lasting price peaks.
Just last week Goldman Sachs analysts had set a year-end price target of $5,400 for gold. The firm cited potential upside from increased private-sector investor participation.
The precious metals rally had been fueled by a weaker U.S. dollar. The U.S. Dollar Index has declined about 10.5% year-over-year, making dollar-priced assets more attractive.
Robin Brooks, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, noted before the crash that conviction levels in the dollar-down trade were high. “The weak Dollar is super-charging the debasement trade,” Brooks wrote on Thursday.
The metals crash prompted speculation about capital rotation into other assets. Bitcoin fell only 1% during the Friday sell-off, a relatively modest decline compared to precious metals.
However, Bitcoin has faced its own challenges recently. At the time of reporting, BTC was down about 6% on the week and 18.9% over one year.
JPMorgan analysts had noted earlier in January that silver prices had already overshot their forecasted averages. The bank acknowledged that calling a top was nearly impossible in markets showing parabolic momentum.
CNBC reporting earlier in the week questioned whether the precious-metals market was “broken.” The coverage focused on thin market depth and speculative flows distorting price movements in both directions.
At the time of reporting, gold was trading at $4,914.96 per ounce, down 8.48%. Silver was at $85.18 per ounce, down 26.30%. Bitcoin was trading at $84,219.
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