Gold surged past $4,600, and silver hit record highs on Monday as investors sought refuge in precious metals, rattled by intensifying political chaos surrounding the Trump administration’s criminal investigation targeting Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.
By mid-morning trading, spot gold had surged 1.7% to $4,584.91 per ounce after touching an intraday record of $4,620. February U.S. gold futures climbed even more aggressively, gaining 2.1% to reach $4,596.70. The rally extends what has already been an extraordinary run for the yellow metal, which posted its strongest annual performance since 1979 last year with gains exceeding 64%.
“Elevated uncertainty plays directly into the gold market,” explained Michael Haigh, global head of commodities research at Societe Generale. “Every week we seem to have another area of uncertainty added,” Haigh suggested the forces driving the rally show no signs of abating in the near term.
At the heart of market anxiety lies an unprecedented constitutional confrontation between the White House and the nation’s central bank. The Trump administration has dramatically intensified pressure on the Federal Reserve, threatening criminal indictment against Chairman Powell over remarks he made regarding a building renovation project—a move Powell himself has characterized as a “pretext” designed to bring the independent institution to heel and secure the interest rate cuts President Trump has repeatedly demanded.
The stakes could hardly be higher. Powell’s term expires in May, and the administration is already positioning potential successors. Fox News has reported that BlackRock’s Rick Rieder is expected to be interviewed as a candidate to replace the embattled Fed chair, signaling that the White House is actively planning for a transition.
The Federal Reserve is widely expected to maintain current interest rates at its upcoming January 27-28 policy meeting, following 75 basis points of cuts implemented last year. However, financial markets continue to price in two additional rate reductions later in 2026, a dynamic that traditionally enhances the appeal of non-yielding assets like gold, which offer no interest or dividends but serve as stores of value during turbulent times.
While gold captured headlines, silver’s performance proved even more dramatic. The white metal touched an all-time high of $85.69 per ounce before settling 5.1% higher at $84. Last year, silver logged its strongest annual performance on record, skyrocketing 146.8%—more than double gold’s already impressive gains.
Ned Naylor-Leyland, a gold and silver fund manager at Jupiter Asset Management, explained the dynamics driving silver’s outsized moves. “Gold and silver go together,” he noted, “but when silver captures flow, it really runs because it’s a smaller channel and it’s more sensitive to the flows in and out.” The relatively thin silver market means that surges in investor demand can produce exponentially larger price swings compared to the more liquid gold market.
The precious metals rally is unfolding against a backdrop of broader geopolitical volatility that extends well beyond the Fed controversy. President Trump is currently weighing potential responses to a violent crackdown on protesters in Iran, adding Middle East tensions to an already combustible mix. His administration’s recent actions have included the removal of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and public discussions about potentially acquiring Greenland from Denmark—moves that have added to global uncertainty.
This confluence of domestic institutional crisis and international instability has created what precious metals analysts describe as an ideal environment for safe-haven assets.
The broader precious metals complex participated in Monday’s surge. Spot platinum climbed 1.8% to $2,314.71 per ounce, while palladium—used primarily in automotive catalytic converters—gained 1.9% to reach $1,850.82.
The coordinated move across all major precious metals suggests investors are seeking portfolio insurance across multiple asset classes rather than making targeted bets on individual commodities. This pattern typically emerges during periods of systemic concern rather than sector-specific optimism.
As markets digest the implications of potential leadership changes at the world’s most influential central bank amid mounting geopolitical flashpoints, precious metals appear poised to maintain their role as the refuge of choice for nervous capital. With few signs that political or economic uncertainty will diminish in the coming months, analysts expect continued volatility—and potentially further records—in gold, silver, and related markets.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Gold and silver have surged to record highs—gold above $4,600 and silver at $85.69—driven primarily by unprecedented political turmoil as the Trump administration threatens to criminally indict Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. This constitutional crisis at America’s central bank, combined with broader geopolitical tensions, has triggered a massive flight to safe-haven assets. With Powell’s term ending in May and no resolution in sight, investors are bracing for continued uncertainty by piling into precious metals as financial insurance. The message is clear: when institutional stability is threatened, gold becomes king.
























