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Metals become less valuable as positions are squeezed.

Wayne Cole gives us a look at what the future holds for European and global markets.

Metals markets are like a packed theatre where someone is shouting "fire" at the audience. Everyone and their mother was piling in gold and silver, including retail investors, leveraged funds, CTAs, and algos. When silver drops?30% within a single session, everyone is running for the exits.

CME responded by increasing margins by 2 to 4 percentage points on certain metals contracts, indicating that some investors have difficulty meeting margin requirements.

Dealers say that Chinese investors had trouble in liquidating their positions. The selling spread to other markets. Momentum can be a powerful force but it also works both ways.

Silver has been down, up and down again by around 8%, at $78.50 per ounce. The price was just above the low of Friday, $73.70. However, this may not be true at the end of this paragraph, given how volatile trading is.

This has led to a risk-off atmosphere in the stock market, with all of Asia in the red. Even the Nikkei couldn't sustain the early gains it made when opinion polls predicted a LDP majority win in the upcoming lower-house elections.

The fact that neither Treasuries nor gold benefited from the recent losses suggests a lack of confidence among investors in U.S. assets.

Gold's decline is affecting other "bubbly markets", with South Korean stocks leading the way, down 5.5%. Wall Street futures have fallen by about 1.2%, and European futures range between 0.6% to 1%.

Corporate earnings must be better than ever to justify the valuations. This week, around 30% of Euro STOXX and a quarter of S&P 500 will report. S&P 500?EPS has grown by 11% year-on-year, compared to consensus expectations of +7%.

All eyes will be on the tech giants Alphabet, Amazon, and AMD - particularly for the costs, and benefits, of AI, in light of Microsoft's poor results.

Goldman Sachs analysts noted that consensus estimates for AI Hyperscalers' capital expenditure this year have risen to $561 billion. This is up 38% from?2025, and compares to the $540 billion anticipated at the beginning of earnings season.

Market developments on Monday that may have a significant impact

- January data includes global PMIs and the U.S. ISM Survey

- Speeches from BoE Deputy Gov. Sarah Breeden and Executive Director Rebecca Jackson

Raphael Bostic, President of the Fed Bank of Atlanta

(source: Reuters)