Trump's hawkish remarks drove an intraday crude rally, prompting markets to
price renewed "second‑round" inflation risk and cooling Fed rate‑cut
expectations. US Treasury yields and the dollar rose, raising the holding cost
of non-yielding assets and triggering concentrated selling in gold and silver.
The move looked liquidity‑driven: long gold positions were highly concentrated
after bets that geopolitical risk would sustain prices, and simultaneously
selloffs in tech and semiconductors forced cross‑asset funds under margin
pressure to liquidate the most liquid, previously profitable holdings first—gold
and silver. Pressure on high‑valuation tech (Samsung Electronics, NVIDIA) and a
sharp intraday plunge in Korea 3x leveraged ETF KORU signaled broad
risk‑exposure reduction. Breaches of key technical levels then triggered quant
and trend funds' chain selling, amplifying volatility. Core takeaway: not a
collapse in safe‑haven demand, but a de‑leveraging episode in which rising rate
and expectations liquidity temporarily stress overrode traditional safe‑haven
dynamics.