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Home » Gold and silver selloff ripples into stocks and commodities
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Gold and silver selloff ripples into stocks and commodities

Published: February 2, 2026
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MENA Newswire, NEW YORK: Gold and silver prices tumbled in a sharp, disorderly selloff that erased an estimated $7 trillion in notional value across precious metals, after a record-setting rally gave way to forced liquidations, margin pressures, and a stronger U.S. dollar. The drop reverberated across commodities and global equities, underscoring how quickly leveraged positioning can unwind even in markets often used as defensive holdings.

Gold and silver selloff ripples into stocks and commodities
Leveraged metals positions unwind quickly as dollar strength adds pressure to bullion prices.

Gold posted its biggest daily fall since 1983 on Friday, January 30, sliding about 9% after touching a record high the prior day. The selling extended into Monday, February 2, with spot gold down another roughly 3% to about $4,686 an ounce in early trade. U.S. gold futures also weakened, while platinum and palladium, which had also surged recently, fell alongside broader metals.

Silver suffered the most extreme move. After reaching fresh highs late last week, spot silver plunged 27% on Friday in its worst daily decline on record, then fell again on Monday. In early Monday trading, spot silver was down about 6% to 7% near $79 an ounce after the prior session’s collapse, reflecting heavy selling in derivatives markets and reduced risk appetite across commodities.

Margin hikes and forced deleveraging

One accelerant was a series of higher margin requirements from CME Group for precious metals futures, steps designed to reflect heightened volatility and reduce systemic risk. CME notices showed initial margin on key gold contracts rising to 8% from 6% for many positions, while silver margins rose to 15% from 11%, with the new requirements scheduled to take effect after the U.S. session on February 2. Higher margins can compel traders to post additional collateral or cut positions, amplifying short-term selling.

The downturn also followed a policy catalyst in the United States. Markets reacted after President Donald Trump announced Kevin Warsh as his pick to lead the Federal Reserve, a move that helped push the dollar higher and shifted rate expectations. A firmer dollar typically pressures dollar-priced commodities, and the change in macro assumptions coincided with a crowded trade after precious metals’ powerful run-up.

Gold and silver had surged to records in recent weeks as investors bought bullion, futures, and exchange-traded products amid elevated uncertainty and strong demand for inflation hedges. By late January, spot gold had climbed above $5,500 an ounce, and silver had risen above $120 an ounce during the peak of the rally. The subsequent reversal was steep, with losses exacerbated by stop orders, thin liquidity in fast markets, and margin-related selling.

Spillover into broader markets

The metals slump fed into a wider selloff across commodities and risk assets. Oil fell sharply, and industrial metals such as copper also declined as traders reduced exposure. Equity markets in Asia and Europe weakened, and U.S. equity futures pointed lower as investors moved to raise cash, in part to meet margin calls tied to large losses in metals-linked positions and related derivatives.

Market participants also pointed to the speed of the rally as a factor in the severity of the reversal. When prices rise rapidly, futures open interest and leveraged bets can grow quickly, leaving markets vulnerable to abrupt moves when volatility spikes. The combination of a stronger dollar, higher futures margins, and accelerated position unwinds produced a sudden, multi-session drop that broke technical levels and intensified liquidation.

The episode left investors focused on liquidity and risk controls in commodities trading, where contracts can move sharply when volatility surges. Precious metals remain widely held by central banks, institutions, and households, but the latest move highlighted that short-term price action can be dominated by derivatives flows and collateral dynamics, not only by physical supply and demand.

By early February, traders were watching whether volatility would stabilize as the new margin framework took effect and leveraged positions were reduced. In the near term, pricing continued to reflect elevated uncertainty and risk reduction across asset classes, with bullion and silver markets absorbing heavy volumes after one of the most abrupt reversals in decades.

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