Editor’s Note
This article describes a sudden, sharp decline in gold and silver prices, attributing the flash crash to a strong U.S. inflation report and subsequent fears of aggressive Federal Reserve action.

Gold and silver prices experienced a sharp, rapid decline in a market-wide flash crash. The sudden sell-off was triggered by a combination of factors, including a stronger-than-expected US Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, which heightened fears of more aggressive monetary tightening by the Federal Reserve. This led to a broad-based risk-off sentiment across financial markets, impacting precious metals alongside equities and other commodities.
Gold futures broke below key technical support levels, accelerating the downward momentum. Silver, known for its higher volatility, saw an even more pronounced drop. The flash crash nature of the move suggests a liquidity squeeze and forced liquidations in leveraged positions.
Market analysts note that while the immediate catalyst was the inflation data, the severity of the move points to underlying fragility in the market structure following a prolonged period of low volatility and crowded positioning.
The event has raised questions about market stability and the potential for further volatility in the precious metals complex as central banks globally shift policy.
