Gold, Silver Plunge As Traders Book Profit From Record Rallies

Precious metals historically post an extremely strong end-of-year rally into the New Year.

An attendant holds a one-kilogram silver bar (Photographer: Akos Stiller/Bloomberg)

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  • Gold and silver prices plunged sharply after a strong year-end rally and profit booking
  • Spot gold dropped as much as 5%, marking its largest intraday fall since Oct 21
  • Silver tumbled 11%, its biggest daily decline since September 2020, following record highs

Gold and silver plunged as traders booked profit following a powerful year-end rally that sent both metals to record highs, with thin market liquidity exacerbating the price swings.

Spot gold fell as much as 5%, marking the biggest intraday drop since Oct. 21 and the second time this year that the precious metal plunged that much in one day. Silver tumbled 11% in its biggest intraday decline since September 2020. Both metals posted a sharp retreat from fresh all-time highs that triggered signals that their rally to records had run too fast, too soon.

“Don’t read into massive moves,” said Michael Haigh, head of FIC and Commodity Research at Societe Generale, adding that the end of every year tends to be “so illiquid.”

Monday’s decline is mostly due to profit-taking after a strong seasonal rally in both gold and silver, according to Haigh. Precious metals historically post an extremely strong end-of-year rally into the New Year. Gold delivered gains of around 4% gains in that period over the last 10 years, while silver has typically gained almost 7%, he said.

Technical indicators for bullion supported the selloff, with the 14-day relative strength index — a gauge of buying and selling momentum — in overbought territory for the past two weeks. That signaled gold’s rally was due for a pullback.

It’s a similar situation in silver, albeit more dramatic: The white metal gained more than 25% since mid-December, with its RSI staying well above 70. A reading of over 70 indicates that too many investors bought it in a short period. 

The iShares Silver Trust, the world’s largest physically backed silver exchange-traded fund, fell as much as 10% in its biggest drop since 2020.

Silver’s sharp reversal Monday came hours after soaring above $84 an ounce as surging Chinese investment demand pulled the metal higher. Premiums for spot silver in Shanghai rose above $8 an ounce over London prices, the biggest spread on record.

Some exchanges are moving to rein in risk. The margins for some Comex silver futures contracts will be raised from Monday, according to a statement from CME Group Inc. — a move that could help reduce speculation.

The latest silver rally came just two months after the London silver market suffered a full-blown squeeze as flows into exchange traded funds and exports to India eroded inventories that were already critically low. London’s vaults have seen significant inflows since then, but much of the world’s available silver remains in New York as traders wait for the outcome of a US probe that could lead to tariffs or other trade restrictions.

Gold fell 4.6% to $4,326.85 an ounce as of 11:17 a.m. in New York. Spot silver fell 9.8% to $71.53 an ounce after earlier hitting a fresh record of $84.01 an ounce. Platinum plunged more than 14% while palladium sank nearly 17% after earlier posting its biggest intraday decline since 2020.

Also Read: China's Silver Export Curbs Trigger Global Supply Fears As Prices Surge

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