Silver suffers historic ‘flash crash’ while US equity futures slip following Fed chair nomination

Wall Street futures slide while precious metals erase trillions in value following the pick of Kevin Warsh to lead the Federal Reserve

Silver suffers historic ‘flash crash’ while US equity futures slip following Fed chair nomination

US equity futures are retreating this morning as the financial world recalibrates after President Trump nominated Kevin Warsh to lead the Federal Reserve.

Early Monday, S&P 500 contracts were down 1.1% while the Nasdaq-100 dropped 1.4% with caution reflecting a broader shift as the "AI trade" loses momentum and investors prepare for a new era of US monetary policy.

One of the headline stories so far is absolute carnage in the precious metals market, which began Friday and has worsened this morning. Silver is the epicenter of the rout, suffering what analysts describe as a "liquidity wipeout." After peaking above $121 last week, silver prices collapsed nearly 33% on Friday (its most violent one-day drop since 1980) to settle near $76. The bleeding has continued Monday with a further 12% tumble to below $75 per ounce as cascading margin calls force leveraged traders to dump their holdings.

Gold has not escaped the fallout, sliding roughly 8% to trade near $4,465 per ounce. This follows a record-breaking January where gold briefly topped $5,500 on geopolitical fears. The sudden reversal is being driven by the "Warsh Effect."

Kevin Warsh is perceived as a significant inflation hawk, and his nomination immediately strengthened the US dollar. Since metals are priced in dollars, a surging greenback makes them far more expensive for international buyers, sparking massive liquidation.

Additional pressure came from the CME Group, which raised margin requirements for gold and silver effective today. By increasing the cash required to hold these positions, the exchange effectively forced out smaller players, accelerating the "flash crash" sentiment.

While some analysts view this as a healthy cooling of an "overbought" market, the scale of the wealth destruction, estimated at half the size of the US economy in paper value, has left investors reeling.

Beyond metals, international markets have already absorbed the shock. South Korea’s Kospi triggered a brief trading halt after plunging 5.3%, while European markets like the DAX have remained resilient, trading up 0.9% on better-than-expected regional growth data.

Among the incoming data Monday is the ISM Manufacturing PMI data due later today and tomorrow’s Reserve Bank of Australia rate decision, which will set the tone for global central bank expectations this week.

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