The precious metals market plunged deeper into chaos on Monday as the emergency margin requirement increase by CME Group amplified a historic selloff that began with President Trump’s nomination of Kevin Warsh to lead the Federal Reserve.
Gold extended its precipitous decline, falling 6.1% to $4,565.79 per ounce in early European trading, building on Friday’s stunning 9% collapse—the yellow metal’s worst single-day performance in more than four decades. The two-day rout has evaporated over $1,000 from gold’s Thursday record of $5,594.82, effectively wiping out the majority of 2026’s spectacular gains that had captivated bullion investors worldwide.
Silver’s descent proved even more catastrophic. The white metal plummeted an additional 12% Monday to $74.48 per ounce after Friday’s historic 27% crash—its worst trading day on record. Since touching an all-time peak of $121.64 just days ago, silver has hemorrhaged approximately 40% of its value in a breathtaking reversal that has left market veterans struggling for historical parallels.
“The Warsh nomination, whilst likely being the initial trigger, did not justify the size of the downward move in precious metals, with forced liquidations and margin increases having a cascading effect,” explained Tim Waterer, chief trade analyst at KCM Trade. “Warsh’s policy approach has been generally supportive of the dollar and by inference, negative for gold, due to his focus on inflation and dim views on quantitative easing and excessive Fed balance sheets.”
CME Margin Hikes Add Fuel to the Fire
The selloff intensified over the weekend when CME Group, the world’s leading derivatives marketplace, announced it would raise margin requirements on precious metal futures contracts effective after Monday’s close—a move that market participants warn could trigger further unwinding of positions.
The timing of CME’s announcement proved particularly punishing for Asian and European markets, which opened Monday to absorb both Friday’s U.S. session carnage and the fresh margin news simultaneously.
“This obviously is a very aggressive move today after a similar one on Friday because Asian and European markets are just now reacting to what happened on Friday in U.S. hours,” said Ilya Spivak, head of global macro at Tastylive. “The larger narrative continues to be gold supportive, but clearly we hit some sort of a speculative speed bump here, and there’s a sort of rearranging of portfolios, especially shorter-term portfolios that are impacted by these margins.”
Higher margin requirements typically dampen speculative activity by demanding greater capital commitments from traders, often forcing leveraged investors to liquidate positions to meet the new thresholds. This creates a self-reinforcing cycle: as prices fall, margin calls force more selling, driving prices lower still.
Contagion Spreads Beyond Precious Metals
The precious metals crash is spreading to broader financial markets. Leveraged investors scrambling to cover margin calls on gold and silver positions have been forced to sell other assets, creating ripple effects across global markets.
Asian equity markets slumped on Monday, while U.S. stock futures pointed to a lower open on Wall Street, suggesting investor anxiety about the potential for broader systemic stress from the metals market dislocation.
U.S. gold futures for April delivery traded 3.3% lower at $4,586.20 per ounce, while platinum collapsed 9.4% to $1,958.93—far below its January 26 record of $2,918.80. Palladium shed 5.1% to $1,611.86.
The Warsh Factor
Kevin Warsh, nominated by President Trump to succeed Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve chair, has long been known for his hawkish stance on inflation and skepticism toward expansive monetary policy. His opposition to quantitative easing and concerns about bloated central bank balance sheets have historically aligned with a stronger dollar environment—a headwind for dollar-denominated commodities like gold.
The nomination signaled to markets that the Fed’s era of accommodative policy may be definitively ending, prompting investors to reassess positions in non-yielding assets like precious metals. Despite current market expectations for at least two rate cuts in 2026, Warsh’s philosophical approach suggests a more restrictive long-term trajectory that could prove challenging for gold bulls.
Technical Damage and Recovery Prospects
From a technical standpoint, the damage is severe. Reuters analyst Wang Tao noted that gold may retrace further into a range of $4,361-$4,476 per ounce after failing to stabilize around the key $4,662 support level—suggesting the selling may not be complete.
However, not all analysts are abandoning their bullish thesis on precious metals. Despite the violent shakeout, strategists at J.P. Morgan maintained their conviction in gold’s medium-term prospects.
“We remain firmly and bullishly convinced in gold over the medium-term on the back of a clean, structural, continued diversification trend that has further to run amid a still well-entrenched regime of real asset outperformance vs. paper assets,” the investment bank said in a research note.
What Comes Next
The key question facing markets is whether this represents a temporary—if violent—correction in an otherwise intact bull market or the beginning of a more fundamental regime change in precious metals.
The forced liquidation dynamic currently gripping the market suggests that much depends on whether leveraged positions have been sufficiently flushed out. Until margin calls subside and speculative excess is wrung from the system, price discovery may remain distorted.
For now, the precious metals market remains in the grip of what traders are describing as a historic deleveraging event—one that serves as a stark reminder of how quickly euphoria can turn to panic when leverage meets volatile markets.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Gold and silver are in free fall—gold is down $1,000 from last week’s record high, and silver is off 40% from its peak—driven by a toxic combination of factors:
The trigger: Kevin Warsh’s Fed chair nomination signaled a hawkish shift away from loose monetary policy, which is bad news for non-yielding metals.
The accelerant: CME Group raised margin requirements over the weekend, forcing leveraged traders to dump positions in a panic, creating a downward spiral.
The contagion: Margin calls are now forcing investors to sell other assets to cover losses, pulling down stock markets across Asia and pressuring U.S. equity futures.
This isn’t just about metal prices—it’s a classic deleveraging event where excessive speculation meets forced liquidation. Until the forced selling exhausts itself, expect continued volatility. The question now is whether this is a temporary shakeout in a long-term bull market or the start of a fundamental reversal in precious metals.
























