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Silver has its worst day since 1983, while gold is on track for the steepest daily decline in history

Gold dropped on Friday and was heading for its steepest daily drop since 1983 after?U.S. Donald Trump named his Fed Chair nominee, and silver fell nearly 30%. It was on track to have its worst-ever day. Gold spot dropped 9.5% at 1:57 pm to $4,883.62 an ounce. Prices reached a record high of $5,594.82 at 1857 GMT ET. U.S. Gold Futures for February?delivery settled at $4,745.10, down 11.4%.

Analysts have described the selloff as a profit-taking. It has also affected other precious metals.

Suki Cooper of Standard Chartered Bank, Global Head, Commodities Research, stated that the market was due for a correction. The triggers could range from the Fed Chair announcement to broader macroflows.

She added, "Whether we are looking at the 'dollar or expectations of real yields, these factors have combined to?trigger profits-taking." Trump chose former Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh to replace Jerome Powell in the Fed chair position in May. This put a critic of central bank into a leadership role.

Gold is on course to rise by more than 13% this month. This will be its sixth consecutive month of growth. The U.S. Dollar Index gained 0.7% this week, recovering from a four-year low earlier in the week. This made greenback-priced Gold more expensive for overseas purchasers.

Nicky Shiels is the head of metals at MKS PAMP SA. He said in a note that "January 2026 will be remembered as the most volatile month?in precious metals?history."

She added that silver at $80 and platinum at $2000 are reasonable targets for the downside. Prices would have to 'decline' to reset to a moderate bullish trajectory. Silver spot was down by 27.7% to $83.99 per ounce, after falling as low as $77.22. Based on LSEG records available up to 1982, prices were set for their largest daily?drop ever. The white metal has risen more than 17% in the past month and reached a new record of $121.64 Thursday. Spot platinum fell 19.18%, to $2,125 per ounce, and palladium dropped 15.7%, to $1,682.

(source: Reuters)