Over the last week, the precious metals market went through a meat grinder. Gold and silver went from moon shot to abrupt crash and back to liftoff in the span of about a week. It’s been a classic case of market psychology, leverage, and the sheer chaos that happens when Washington throws a spitball at Wall Street.
Several distinct features come to mind. The “Warsh Shock and Flaw”, for example, and why the inflation hawk narrative you’re hearing on the news is likely wrong.
To understand where we are, we have to look at how we started 2026. Quite frankly, January was insane. Gold wasn’t just rising. It was skyrocketing. By January 29, gold hit a staggering all-time high of $5,608 per ounce. Silver was even crazier, breaching $120 per ounce; up nearly 70 percent in a single month.
But, as anyone who’s followed markets for a cycle or two knows, prices cannot go vertically for long. A rapidly rising market will soon outpace the underlying economic reality. A peak is reached where the cost of assets exceeds the available pool of capital and the actual productivity of the economy. Continue reading







