Gold is recovering after one of its hardest drops in years. At the time of writing, prices are up $62 to about $4,126/oz, while silver has climbed $1.25 to $48.93/oz. Platinum jumped 6.4% in London to $1,646/oz, its biggest move since 2020, as traders rushed to secure physical metal
Oil is also rising. U.S. crude is up $3.25 to $61.75/barrel, and Brent is above $65, marking its fastest rebound in more than two years. The U.S. dollar is steady, Treasury yields are near 3.99%, and global equities remain close to record highs. Everything looks fine on the surface, but liquidity is quietly disappearing beneath it.
In this week’s GoldCoreTV episode, Gold and Silver: The Great Liquidity Squeeze, we take a closer look at what this really means.
Last week’s sharp fall in gold was not a loss of faith. It was a sign of strain. Investors sold their most liquid assets to raise cash, a pattern we have seen before when liquidity dries up. Gold’s price became a mirror reflecting the stress in the system rather than weakness in the metal itself.
In the video, we explore:
- Why liquidity, not confidence, drove gold’s correction.
- How forced selling reveals the fragility behind the façade of market strength.
- Why central banks continue to quietly accumulate gold while others stay distracted by price.
If this week’s market chaos feels familiar, you are right. The cracks that appeared in 2020 are showing again, only this time they run deeper. Is gold getting ready for yet another all-time high?