# gold
Latest news and articles about gold
Total: 90 articles found

Retail Traders Double Down as Gold Crashes; Chinese Banks Raise Bar to Curb Risk
A sharp fall in global gold prices at the end of January and early February prompted Chinese retail investors to average down aggressively while major banks raised minimums and issued warnings to curb risk. The episode reflects growing retail participation in precious‑metals markets and a tension between long‑term structural demand drivers for gold and short‑term monetary policy signals that can reverse price gains rapidly.

Gold and Silver Bounce After Historic Flash Crash — Volatility, Deleveraging and a Strong Dollar Still Loom
Gold and silver rebounded in early February after unprecedented intraday plunges at the end of January and renewed selling on Feb. 2. The shocks were driven by a rapid deleveraging of positions and a renewed expectation of a stronger US dollar following Kevin Warsh’s nomination for Fed chair, while Chinese state banks raised margins and issued risk warnings to curb retail exposure.

Gold’s Retail Frenzy Pauses as Prices Plunge and Bank Inventories Reappear
A rapid reversal in precious-metals markets has cooled the retail scramble for physical gold in China, with major banks reporting renewed inventory after weeks of sell-outs. The correction was triggered by a drop in fears over Fed independence following a high-profile nomination, prompting a dollar rebound and sending volatile price signals through both futures and retail channels.

Gen‑Z Caught in the Silver Storm: How a record precious‑metals swing turned a trendy fund into a classroom for retail investors
A historic surge and collapse in gold and silver prices at the end of January exposed fragile market mechanics and left many Chinese retail investors—particularly Gen‑Z—caught in volatile trades around Guotou Silver LOF (161226). The shock combined stretched valuations, elevated implied volatility, regulatory curbs and a hawkish shift in U.S. monetary policy to produce a rapid deleveraging in precious metals.

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.

Gold and Silver Plunge Sparks Market-Wide Shock as Exchanges Tighten Controls
A dramatic sell-off on February 2 sent gold and silver tumbling and forced exchanges in China and abroad to raise margins and restrict trading. Regulators cited abusive trading and liquidity risks, while analysts warn the move reflects sentiment-driven flows and policy-related uncertainty rather than purely fundamentals.

Shuibei in Shock: China’s Retail Gold Market Reels as Metals Suffer Historic Single‑Day Falls
A violent repricing in precious metals on January 30 sent spot gold down more than 9% — the biggest daily drop since 1983 — and silver tumbling as much as 36% intraday. Shenzhen’s Shuibei bullion market became the frontline, with frantic selling, opportunistic buying and banks raising risk thresholds as retail investors coped with rapid losses. The shock highlights how speculative excess, thin physical liquidity and cross‑market contagion can quickly imperil even traditionally ‘safe’ assets.

Margin Calls, a Fed Nomination and an Epic Plunge: What Broke the Gold and Silver Rally
A sudden change in U.S. Fed leadership expectations triggered a dollar rally and mass liquidations that sent gold and silver tumbling from record highs in late January. Forced margin calls, tightened exchange risk controls and algorithmic selling amplified the shock, producing one of the most violent single-day declines in decades while raising questions about leverage and liquidity in commodity markets.

After Metals Flash Crash, CME Raises Margins — Liquidity Set to Tighten as Crowded Longs Unwind
A violent rout in gold and silver prompted the CME to raise COMEX margin requirements, with gold margins moving from 6% to 8% and silver from 11% to 15%, effective after the close on Feb. 2. The crash was driven by a rapid shift in Fed expectations following the nomination of Kevin Warsh and the unwinding of crowded, highly leveraged long positions, forcing exchanges to shore up clearinghouse protections.

Gold’s Rollercoaster: Record Peak, Lightning Sell-Off and What Comes Next
Gold rallied to an extraordinary intraday peak in late January before a flash crash erased roughly 6% and knocked several silver and gold ETFs lower. The drop reflected technical profit-taking and forced liquidations amid a crowded, leveraged market, but structural supports — weak dollars, central-bank buying and geopolitical risk — remain intact.

Flash Crash in Precious Metals: Gold Suffers 40-Year Intraday Drop as Silver Plunges 36%
A dramatic overnight sell-off saw spot silver plunge as much as 36% and spot gold fall over 12% intraday, with both metals closing substantially lower. The rout followed a rebound in the dollar after news that President Trump would nominate Kevin Warsh as the next Fed chair, and was amplified by crowded positioning and thin liquidity. The move raises questions about market positioning, Fed independence and the durability of metals as an inflation hedge.

Shenzhen ‘Private Gold’ Scheme Freezes Withdrawals as Investors Face Billion‑Yuan Losses
A Shenzhen‑based private gold platform, Jieworui, has frozen withdrawals and offered investors steep haircuts, leaving potential claims exceeding 100 billion yuan and tens of thousands affected. The product was a high‑leverage, social‑media‑distributed ‘lock‑price’ scheme that failed when rising gold prices overwhelmed the operator’s liquidity, prompting regulatory scrutiny and potential criminal probes.