|

Navigating volatility and the global shift in Gold and Silver [Video]

Over the past month, gold and silver have experienced significant volatility. Following a rapid rally into record highs, momentum-driven naked longs were strategically flushed out through carefully timed margin increases and bid-pulling events on the COMEX. This produced a roughly 10% correction in gold and a 15% correction in silver futures.

Yet ETF holdings barely budged, highlighting the strength of physically backed demand and demonstrating that these corrections were largely speculative and synthetic.

From weak hands to strong physical support

The correction redistributed metals from speculative actors into strong, physically backed positions. Commercial participants, central banks, and institutional buyers absorbed gold and silver as paper markets reached their limits. With COMEX no longer able to dominate price formation, prices are now increasingly set by real physical demand, not speculative momentum.

Silver’s parallel dynamics

Silver followed a similar trajectory. Spot and futures prices pulled back to liquidity pivot points, triggering short covering. The London Precious Metals Clearing Limited consortium temporarily alleviated backwardation pressures by moving silver to London, yet systemic physical shortages persist. This created a short-lived opportunity for buyers to convert debt-based fiat into tangible bullion at underpriced levels, further strengthening the physical market.

The BRICS-led de-dollarisation shift

Beyond market mechanics, a profound structural change is underway. China, India, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and the BRICS coalition have accelerated physical gold accumulation, challenging the US dollar’s dominance. China’s Shanghai Gold Exchange now supports 1:1 conversion of yuan to physical gold, creating a high-quality liquid asset free of counterparty risk. This infrastructure attracts global central banks and institutional investors seeking to hedge fiat depreciation.

These developments have shifted the global gold price benchmark from legacy paper markets to physically backed, Asia-centric markets. The COMEX and LBMA can no longer dictate global pricing. This structural shift reinforces the purchasing power of gold and silver.

Limitations of US countermeasures

The US Treasury and Federal Reserve face constraints in responding to this shift. Limited gold reserves, rehypothecated holdings, and outstanding derivative obligations make conventional pushback ineffective. Initiatives such as issuing dollar-backed stablecoins cannot compete with gold-backed BRICS currencies, as counterparties can instantly convert into physical gold, neutralising potential dollar influence.

Implications for investors and stackers

Speculative overshoots are temporary. Physically backed positions define long-term value. With strong institutional and central bank demand, gold and silver remain poised for recovery and further gains. End-of-year targets for gold remain on track, and silver is positioned to retest previous highs. This environment offers an opportunity for investors to convert fiat into physical bullion at favourable pivot points, while positioning for the next phase of appreciation.

A resilient physical market

This period demonstrates the resilience of the physical market. Short-term volatility has been absorbed, speculative positions have been rinsed, and global liquidity has shifted toward tangible, high-quality assets. According to Andrew Maguire, gold and silver seem central to the rebalancing of international monetary power, providing stability for investors who prioritise physical holdings.

A new era for precious metals

The combination of engineered market corrections and the expansion of physically backed global markets underscores a critical reality: gold and silver increasingly define monetary stability. Those focused on physical holdings are positioned to benefit from rising demand, structural shifts in global pricing, and the ongoing de-dollarisation of international trade. For stackers and investors, this is a pivotal moment to strengthen their portfolios.

Author

Samuel Briggs

Samuel Briggs

Kinesis Money

Samuel holds a deep understanding of the precious metals markets, and as an in-house journalist for 1:1 gold and silver-backed monetary system, Kinesis, he is chiefly responsible for updating the community with insights and analys

More from Samuel Briggs
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD flirts with daily highs, retargets 1.1900

EUR/USD regains upside traction, returning to the 1.1880 zone and refocusing its attention to the key 1.1900 barrier. The pair’s slight gains comes against the backdrop of a humble decline in the US Dollar as investors continue to assess the latest US CPI readings and the potential Fed’s rate path.

GBP/USD remains well bid around 1.3650

GBP/USD maintains its upside momentum in place, hovering around daily highs near 1.3650 and setting aside part of the recent three-day drop. Cable’s improved sentiment comes on the back of the Greenback’s  irresolute price action, while recent hawkish comments from the BoE’s Pill also collaborate with the uptick.

Gold clings to gains just above $5,000/oz

Gold is reclaiming part of the ground lost on Wednesday’s marked decline, as bargain-hunters keep piling up and lifting prices past the key $5,000 per troy ounce. The precious metal’s move higher is also underpinned by the slight pullback in the US Dollar and declining US Treasury yields across the curve.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP in choppy price action, weighed down by falling institutional interest 

Bitcoin's upside remains largely constrained amid weak technicals and declining institutional interest. Ethereum trades sideways above $1,900 support with the upside capped below $2,000 amid ETF outflows.

Week ahead – Data blitz, Fed Minutes and RBNZ decision in the spotlight

US GDP and PCE inflation are main highlights, plus the Fed minutes. UK and Japan have busy calendars too with focus on CPI. Flash PMIs for February will also be doing the rounds. RBNZ meets, is unlikely to follow RBA’s hawkish path.

Ripple Price Forecast: XRP potential bottom could be in sight

Ripple edges up above the intraday low of $1.35 at the time of writing on Friday amid mixed price actions across the crypto market. The remittance token failed to hold support at $1.40 the previous day, reflecting risk-off sentiment amid a decline in retail and institutional sentiment.