HomeBlogUncategorizedinvestingLive Asia-Pacific FX news wrap: Precious metals hammered, big time

investingLive Asia-Pacific FX news wrap: Precious metals hammered, big time

Crypto ICYMI – Standard Chartered cuts Solana 2026 target but keeps bullish long viewWhy Is Bitcoin Crashing? Technical Analysis Shows Sellers Still in ControlPrecious metals slammed, silver plummeted. Was it this news out of China?Silver takes a nosedive as dip buyers are dealt a setbackIndia shares seen higher on trade deal optimism, IT stocks in focusJapan 30-year yields ease before auction as election risk lingersWestpac flags risk of back-to-back RBA tightening if data surprises to upsidePBoC uses 14-day reverse repos today ahead of Lunar New YearHow China’s “national team” shapes stock market movesPBOC sets USD/ CNY reference rate for today at 6.9570 (vs. estimate at 6.9468)Sterling firms ahead of BoE as markets push back rate-cut timing – preview of today’s meetAustralian data: December 2025 imports down m/m, while exports rose m/mMore from Fed’s Cook: Urges patience as inflation remains above targetFed’s Cook warns inflation risks remain tilted higherPreview ECB on hold today, Thursday, February 5, 2026.Deutsche Bank sees next move in 2027Barclays sees rising risk premium weighing on US dollarHolding breath for this: Nvidia China AI chip sales hinge on Trump licensing conditionsOil jumps, dumps as Iran and US play phone tagChina targets unified domestic market to boost consumption and services demandAlphabet beats Q4 revenue but shocks markets with massive 2026 capex outlookinvestingLive Americas market news wrap: Software stocks beaten up, Oil chops on Iran risk

At a glance:

Precious metals were smashed in thin liquidity, with silver collapsing sharply

Gold slipped amid weak China demand data and broader risk aversion

Crypto sold off again, with Bitcoin breaking below US$71k

US equities fell on renewed AI disruption fears; oil whipsawed on Iran headlines

Alphabet earnings beat on revenue but heavy capex capped enthusiasm

Fed’s Cook reinforced a hawkish bias, pushing back against near-term rate cuts

AUD weakened with the USD bid; JPY softer on Japan election/fiscal fears

Precious metals were the standout movers during the session, and violently so, with prices plunging in what looked like a classic thin-liquidity air pocket. Silver was hit hardest, dropping around 15% in a matter of minutes. While there was some fundamental news around gold, the scale and speed of the move suggested positioning, fear and poor liquidity were the dominant drivers rather than a single data point.

On the news front, China’s gold consumption fell 3.57% in 2025 to just over 950 tonnes, according to the China Gold Association. At the same time, domestic gold output rose 1.09% year-on-year to 381.3 tonnes. The data added a mildly negative tone for gold, but did not fully explain the sharp sell-off.

Crypto assets also came under renewed pressure. Bitcoin slid back below US$71,000, extending a downtrend that has so far rewarded trend-followers, with little evidence yet of capitulation or a stabilising bid.

The lead into the Asia session was already fragile. US equities fell as investors fretted, again, that artificial intelligence could pose an existential threat to parts of the traditional software and services model. Oil prices were highly volatile, surging initially on reports that US–Iran talks might collapse, before giving back gains just as quickly after confirmation that talks will take place on Friday in Oman.

In earnings, Alphabet delivered a solid top-line performance for the December quarter. Revenue beat expectations on strength in Search, advertising and Cloud, although YouTube Ads slightly missed. Operating income fell marginally short as costs stayed elevated, and investors focused heavily on guidance showing 2026 capex jumping to US$175–185bn, well above consensus 9around $115bn). Shares swung after hours but ended net higher, with Piper Sandler and Oppenheimer both lifting price targets.

From central banks, Federal Reserve Board Governor Lisa Cook struck a firm tone, signalling little appetite for near-term rate cuts. She said inflation risks remain tilted to the upside, with progress back to the 2% target having stalled, reinforcing a cautious Fed stance.

In FX, the Australian dollar traded lower, largely reflecting broader US dollar strength rather than domestic data, Australia’s goods trade surplus widening in December. The New Zealand dollar, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc, pound and euro also weakened. The yen lost ground again, briefly trading above 157, as markets brace for a decisive election win by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and the prospect of looser fiscal policy.

In corporate news, the Financial Times reported that Nvidia’s planned sales of H200 AI chips to China remain under US national security review, nearly two months after exports were initially approved in principle.

Asia-Pac
stocks:

Japan
(Nikkei 225) -0.97%Hong
Kong (Hang Seng) -1.27%
Shanghai
Composite -1.03%Australia
(S&P/ASX 200) -0.47%
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Contact information

If you have any queries or complaint reach us out.

Copyright: © 2024 – All Rights Reserved. Made with 💛 by A2Solutions.