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Gold and silver slide in ‘metals meltdown’; UK factory growth hits 17-month high – business live | Business

Gold and silver slide in ‘metals meltdown’; UK factory growth hits 17-month high – business live | Business

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Introduction: Gold and silver slump in ‘metals meltdown’

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

Commodity, precious metals and crypto asset prices are all sliding today, as the record-breaking rally in gold and silver cools.

Financial markets have begun the new week in a volatile mood, with analysts talking about a “metals meltdown” that is also rattling the equities markets.

Gold is falling back after a months-long rally drove it to a series of record highs. It’s slumped by over 8% so far this session, down to $4,465 a ounce, having hit a record high of nearly $5,600/oz just last week.

Silver is living up to its nickname of the “Devil’s Metal” (for its volatility) – it has slumped by 13% today.

Both gold and silver tumbled last Friday, the day in which Donald Trump said he would nominate Kevin Warsh to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve.

Michael Brown, senior research strategist at Pepperstone, says:

Certainly, the final trading day of January was anything but calm, being dominated by what can only be termed a meltdown in the metals space. In terms of ‘scores on the doors’, spot gold ended Friday with losses of 9%, bullion’s worst day since 2013, and fourth worst in the last 45 years.

Silver, meanwhile, shed as much as 35% at the lows, before trimming losses to end the day a still-chunky 26% lower, the worst daily loss ever, at least per Bloomberg data.

Warsh does have a reputation as a more hawkish policymaker than rival candidates, who wants to shrink the Fed’s balance sheet, so investors may be anticipating tighter monetary policy than expected (although Trump is already joking about suing Warsh if he doesn’t lower interest rates).

Vivek Dhar, a commodities strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA), explains:

“A stronger U.S. dollar is also adding pressure on precious metals and other commodities, including oil and base metals.”

“The decision by markets to sell precious metals alongside U.S. equities suggests investors view Warsh as more hawkish.”

But.. KCM Chief Trade analyst Tim Waterer argues the selloff goes deeper, explaining:

“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.”

The agenda

  • 7am GMT: Nationwide house price index for January

  • 9am GMT: Eurozone manufacturing PMI for January

  • 9.30am GMT: UK manufacturing PMI for January

  • 11.45am BST: Bank of England governor Sarah Breeden gives speech on ‘Next generation UK retail payments’

  • 3pm GMT: US manufacturing PMI for January

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Key events

The turmoil in the precious metals market has left traders in China nursing losses, with one dealer reportedly fleeing the country.

Bloomberg are reporting that Chinese metals traders have racked up losses totaling at least 1 billion yuan (£105m), and that Xu Maohua, a metals dealer known as “The Hat” has scarpered.

They say:

At the heart of the crisis is a trading network facilitated by Xu Maohua, a metals dealer nicknamed The Hat, said the people, including some who worked with or did business with him and are directly affected by the losses. State-backed SDIC Commodities Co. was the highest-profile participant, they added, asking not to be named given the sensitivity of the matter.

Xu owed money to the company for shipments of copper and other metals, and it in turn owed money to its suppliers, the people said. The fallout includes one lawsuit against SDIC Commodities filed for over 200 million yuan in damages and bills that the plaintiff claims have gone unpaid, according to an exchange filing from a company involved. The firm has not publicly responded.

Exclusive: Metals traders face at least 1 billion yuan ($144 million) of losses after a dealer known as ‘The Hat’ fled China, alarming top regulators https://t.co/aW6kAQUH8h

— Bloomberg (@business) February 2, 2026

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