Tuesday, February 03, 2026
Why gold and silver crashed, wiping out trillions
تم إعداد هذا المنشور من قبل فيجاي فاليتشا
Vijay Valecha, February 3, 2026, Gulf Business
The sudden collapse in gold and silver prices that erased trillions of dollars in market value was not driven by a single headline or political announcement, but by a tightly wound mix of leverage, margin pressure and market structure failures that finally snapped in late January.
After months of relentless gains, precious metals reversed sharply between January 27 and February 2, triggering one of the steepest sell-offs in decades. Silver fell from highs of around $121 an ounce, while gold retreated from peaks near $5,597, dragging futures, ETFs and spot prices sharply lower.
While early media narratives focused on speculation surrounding US President Donald Trump’s announcement of a new Federal Reserve chair Kevin Warsh, market participants point to more technical and structural causes behind the move.
Margin pressure created a forced unwind
In mid-January, the CME Group shifted from a fixed-dollar margin system to a percentage-based margin framework. The change significantly increased the amount of collateral required as metal prices rose, effectively capping leverage just as prices were hitting record highs.
As prices began to dip, leveraged investors were forced to either inject fresh capital or liquidate positions, accelerating the sell-off across COMEX futures and exchange-traded funds.
China trading halt added fuel to the fire
The second major shock came from China. On January 30, the Shenzhen Stock Exchange imposed a full-day emergency trading halt on the SDIC Silver Futures Fund, mainland China’s only publicly traded fund dedicated to silver futures.
The halt effectively trapped capital onshore, forcing offshore selling to meet margin calls, amplifying pressure on already fragile futures markets.
Was this manipulation or spoofing?
The speed and scale of the decline reignited speculation about market manipulation, spoofing and coordinated selling, especially given the long history of regulatory action in precious metals markets.
Gold and silver trade in highly financialised, derivative-heavy ecosystems, particularly on COMEX and through the London over-the-counter market linked to London Bullion Market Association. Daily paper trading volumes routinely exceed physical supply multiples over.
US regulators have previously fined traders at major banks for spoofing — the practice of placing large fake orders to influence prices before cancelling them — in precious metals futures. However, there is no confirmed evidence of coordinated wrongdoing linked to this specific crash.
Impact on investors and the Gulf region
The sharp correction reflects a leverage-driven risk reset, rather than a breakdown in precious-metal fundamentals, according to analysts cited by Bloomberg and Reuters.
Silver bore the brunt of the sell-off due to concentrated futures positioning, but gold was pulled lower as professional investors reduced exposure amid heightened volatility.
In the UAE, the global rout translated into a swift correction in local prices. Dubai gold prices fell by more than Dh100 per gram, sliding to around Dh553 per gram from Dh589, mirroring international futures markets rather than weakening physical demand.
The move also underlined a key lesson for regional investors: futures markets can become temporarily decoupled from physical supply-demand dynamics. Violent downside moves do not necessarily signal the end of a cycle.
What happens next
Silver remains structurally tight, with a supply deficit of around 9 per cent in 2025, projected to widen significantly by the end of the decade. Gold continues to see strong central-bank demand, while technically both metals have bounced from key moving averages.
Looking ahead, volatility is likely to remain elevated. Rising real yields, particularly if balance-sheet reduction accelerates under a more hawkish Fed stance, could pressure commodities in the near term. But for long-term investors, sharp corrections may offer staggered entry opportunities rather than signalling the end of the precious-metals cycle.
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