# de‑dollarization

Latest news and articles about de‑dollarization

Total: 3 articles found

Scrabble tiles arranged to spell 'FED' on a marble surface, symbolizing finance.
Business

After a Thrilling Rout, Gold Rebounds — But the Market’s New Logic Is Unsettled

Gold and silver swung wildly in late January, with record highs followed by sharp one‑day falls and a partial rebound that left volatility at multi‑year highs. Analysts point to profit‑taking, margin hikes and Fed political signalling as immediate triggers, but many see longer‑term supports — central‑bank buying and dollar fragility — still intact, making the market structurally different and unpredictably volatile.

SoBiz2026年2月4日 08:00
#gold#silver#Federal Reserve
Scrabble tiles arranged to spell 'FED' on a marble surface, symbolizing finance.
Business

After a Whiplash Week for Precious Metals, Is the Gold Rally Still Intact?

A dramatic January swing saw gold spike to near $5,600 then fall almost 9% in a single day before rebounding, exposing the fragility of a momentum‑driven rally. Analysts say the sell‑off was driven by profit‑taking, margin hikes and a reaction to a hawkish Fed nominee, but many argue the underlying structural case for metals — central‑bank buying and questions about the dollar — remains intact.

SoBiz2026年2月4日 02:00
#gold#silver#Federal Reserve
Detailed view of the US Federal Reserve System seal on currency with yellow digital numbers.
Business

Gold’s Panic Plunge: A 20% Correction, Structural Bull Market Intact — But Don’t Rush to Bottom‑Fish

A panic sell‑off pushed spot gold down roughly 10% intraday to about $4,400/oz, marking a more than 20% decline from recent highs after markets repriced US monetary policy following the nomination of former Fed governor Warsh. While short‑term volatility and technical damage argue against immediate bottom‑fishing, long‑term structural drivers such as central‑bank buying, physical demand and questions about dollar dominance keep a multi‑year bullish case alive.

SoBiz2026年2月3日 06:50
#gold#Federal Reserve#Warsh