Monday brought relief to precious metals investors as gold and silver fought back from steep declines that had unsettled financial markets globally. Gold prices climbed from an 8% crash to $4,465 per ounce, reaching $4,700 by afternoon despite remaining down 3.5%. The yellow metal had been approaching $5,600 in previous trading.
Silver demonstrated similar recovery dynamics, advancing from a 7% drop following Friday’s catastrophic 30% collapse to settle at $79.60 per ounce. These movements occurred as Britain’s blue-chip stock index achieved unprecedented success, breaking through the 10,300 level for the first time and closing at 10,341 after touching 10,345 during the session.
Recent weeks had witnessed both metals climbing to consecutive highs as market participants pursued safe havens amid escalating international conflicts and fears surrounding Federal Reserve political independence. The market shift began Friday when authorities revealed Kevin Warsh as the nominee for Fed chairman, a respected former governor with distinguished credentials. Warsh is set to take the helm in May following Senate approval.
Financial strategists explain the selloff as investor confidence that partisan influence won’t dominate economic policy at the central bank. According to Susannah Streeter at Wealth Club, Warsh’s deep Federal Reserve background suggests he’ll maintain independence, prompting major repositioning away from defensive assets. Pepperstone’s Michael Brown characterized the initial decline as a comprehensive “meltdown in the metals space.”
Broader financial markets showed mixed signals, with cryptocurrency bitcoin advancing 1.8% against the dollar while staying below $80,000, and oil retreating 4% to about $65.24 per barrel on easing geopolitical tensions. Despite recent volatility clearing positions, precious metals maintain extraordinary gains, with gold up 65% and silver climbing more than 120% year-over-year, while Deutsche Bank analysts continue projecting gold will reach $6,000 this year.