Precious metals trading brought relief Monday as gold and silver fought back from severe losses that had created uncertainty across financial markets. Gold climbed from an 8% crash to $4,465 per ounce, reaching $4,700 by afternoon despite remaining down 3.5%. The metal had been trading near $5,600 in recent sessions.
The silver market demonstrated similar resilience, recovering from a 7% drop following Friday’s catastrophic 30% collapse to settle at $79.60 per ounce. These movements in precious metals helped propel Britain’s blue-chip stock index to new heights, breaking through the 10,300 level for the first time and closing at 10,341 after hitting 10,345 during trading.
Both precious metals had been achieving successive highs as market participants pursued protective assets amid escalating international conflicts and fears surrounding Federal Reserve political independence. The market shift commenced Friday when the White House revealed Kevin Warsh as the nominee for Fed chairman, a former governor respected for his central banking expertise. Following Senate approval, Warsh will assume leadership in May.
Financial strategists attribute the metals decline to investor confidence that political allegiance won’t compromise interest rate policy. Susannah Streeter from Wealth Club emphasized that Warsh’s deep Federal Reserve background indicates he’ll maintain independence, prompting widespread exits from safe-haven positions. The volatility spread to industrial metals including platinum and copper, which also experienced declines.
Broader market indicators showed cryptocurrency bitcoin gaining 1.8% while staying under $80,000, and oil retreating 4% to about $65.24 per barrel on easing geopolitical tensions. Analysts explained the movement cleared overcrowded speculative positions, with metrics falling substantially from extreme levels, while both metals retain impressive gains compared to last year, with gold up 65% and silver climbing more than 120%.