Market Massacre: Gold and Silver Crash as Trump Pick Shocks Wall Street | Streamline Feed

The safe-haven trade has detonated. In a session of unparalleled violence for precious metals, gold and silver have suffered a catastrophic collapse, erasing billions in value as global markets react to a seismic shift in American monetary policy.
Spot gold has plummeted over 9% to trade at roughly KES 660,000 ($4,403) per ounce, while silver has been bludgeoned, shedding 15% to trade below KES 10,800 ($72). This is not a correction; it is a capitulation. The trigger was the surprise nomination of Kevin Warsh by President Donald Trump to lead the Federal Reserve, a move interpreted by the markets as a prelude to aggressive interest rate hikes that strip non-yielding assets like bullion of their allure.
The Bubble Bursts
For months, the “Trump Trade” and geopolitical anxiety had inflated a commodities bubble of historic proportions. Central banks, particularly in Asia, hoarded bullion as a hedge against dollar instability, pushing gold past the KES 825,000 ($5,500) mark in January.
- The Warsh Effect: Kevin Warsh is a known hawk. His nomination signals the end of the “easy money” era, strengthening the dollar and making gold expensively unattractive for foreign buyers.
- Panic Selling: The speed of the drop suggests leveraged positions are being liquidated. When the price broke key technical supports, algorithms took over, accelerating the sell-off into a rout.
Impact on the Kenyan Investor
For the local investor in Nairobi who sought refuge in commodities, this is a brutal wake-up call. The strength of the shilling against this backdrop remains precarious. While lower global commodity prices might ease import bills, the volatility signals a rocky road ahead for global liquidity.
Analysts warn that the floor has not yet been found. “This is a repricing of the world’s financial architecture,” notes one City analyst. “Gold is no longer the safety net; right now, cash is king.” The glitter has gone, and the scramble for the exit is just beginning.




