Bitcoin-Led Crypto Rout Erases Nearly $500 Billion in Just One Week

A selloff led by Bitcoin has erased nearly half a trillion dollars from the crypto market in less than a week. The total value of the entire cryptocurrency market has dropped by $468 billion since January 29, according to CoinGecko data. Tuesday saw Bitcoin fall to its lowest point since US President Donald Trump was re-elected in early November 2024 and a more pro-crypto administration took office.

Bitcoin is in decline after Trump threatens Europe with tariffs.
Bitcoin is in decline after Trump threatens Europe with tariffs.

The cryptocurrency recovered slightly on Wednesday, trading at about $76,600 at 6:50 a.m. after hitting a 15-month low of $72,877 earlier in the day in London. Bitcoin has declined roughly 40% since reaching a record high in early October, despite a pro-crypto White House and increasing institutional adoption.

The decline follows a devastating series of liquidations on October 10 that wiped out leveraged token wagers worth $19 billion, from which the larger crypto market has not yet recovered. These drops come after a turbulent week for international markets, which also experienced significant fluctuations in gold and silver.

Cryptocurrencies did not find support on Tuesday, but precious metals saw buyers after recent losses. Rising tensions between the US and Iran prompted investors to seek safe investments, leading to declines in both Bitcoin and US stocks. The fall in Bitcoin raises questions about its role as a “digital gold,” as it has not served as a safe haven during times of increased geopolitical uncertainty.

This week, investor Michael Burry warned that Bitcoin has not proven to be a hedge like precious metals and instead is a purely speculative asset. Over $700 million in bullish and bearish crypto bets have been liquidated in the perpetual futures market in the past day, bringing the total loss since January to over $6.67 billion, according to CoinGlass data.

Bitcoin exchange-traded funds with US listings continue to experience volatile flows, with net inflows of roughly $562 million.

 

Gold/Silver Investors Queasy From Epic Swings: Hang On Tight

Investors in gold are generally hardy individuals who are accustomed to market fluctuations. However, the recent fluctuations have made even devoted gold bugs and the more recent generation of silver investors uneasy.

Gold

 

The record-breaking surge in precious metals came to an abrupt end on Friday, with silver experiencing its largest daily decline on record and gold plunging the most since 2013. On Monday, prices continued to decline. After that, gold increased by more than 6% to almost $4,950 per ounce on Tuesday, while silver increased by more than 10% to $87.

Investors had turned to gold amid geopolitical unrest and worries about the  Federal Reserve’s independence, especially gold-backed ETFs. In addition, central banks expanded their holdings of the well-known haven asset, and in recent weeks, a surge of Chinese speculation drove prices even higher.

There were already rumors that prices were about to drop before the announcement that President Donald Trump intended to name Kevin Warsh as Fed chair. Warsh is seen as the most hawkish of the remaining contenders, which heightened the anticipation of a stricter monetary policy that would support the dollar and devalue gold.

Investors are attempting to understand the mechanics behind the historic slump by exchanging theories and advice on social media sites and Reddit forums. Skeptics cautioned that the market had become crowded and might continue to be volatile as positions are reset, in addition to posters promising to “buy the dip.”.

While some suggested “zooming out,” pointing out that prices are still higher than they were a year ago, others bemoaned adding to their holdings just before the downturn and openly questioned whether they should act quickly in response.

Nvidia Hits $180 Low as $20 Billion OpenAI Round Investment Report Sparks Volatility

NVDA closed at $180.34, down almost 4%,  it opened at $186.24 after hitting a low of $176.23 during the day. It fell even further to about $179 during after-hours trading. This decline is a result of volatility related to reports about Nvidia’s participation in OpenAI’s massive funding round.

NVIDIA is close to reaching an agreement to invest $20 billion in OpenAI as part of its most recent funding round. This would be the chipmaker’s largest investment in the ChatGPT developer.

According to the people who spoke on condition of anonymity because the information is confidential, Nvidia’s contribution is almost finished.

The terms of the agreement are subject to change and are not final. According to Bloomberg News, OpenAI is seeking to raise to $100 billion for a new round of funding, with a significant portion coming from big tech companies. Amazon. Com, Inc. has discussed investing up to $50 billion, and SoftBank. has discussed investing up to $30 billion.

NVIDIA may invest up to $20 billion, according to earlier reports from The Financial Times. Despite being key players in the AI boom, Nvidia and OpenAI’s relationship has recently come under increased scrutiny due to reports of tensions between the two companies. The Wall Street Journal published an article about it.

NVIDIA and OpenAI have been linchpins of the AI boom, but their relationship has come under new scrutiny in recent days amid reports of tensions between the two firms. The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that a plan that Nvidia announced in September to invest as much as $100 billion in OpenAI overall had stalled after some inside the chip giant expressed doubts about the deal.

The chief executives of both companies have since publicly said they remain committed to working together. “We will definitely participate in the next round of financing because it’s such a good investment,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told reporters while visiting Taipei on Saturday. He added that it would potentially be “the largest investment we’ve ever made.

PayPal Stock Craters on Earnings Miss, CEO Shake-Up

PayPal announced that Enrique Lores will succeed Alex Chriss as CEO. Chriss’s turnaround plan failed to meet goals and streamline the vast payments company.

The shares fell as much as 19 percent, the largest intraday decline in over four years, following the CEO’s announcement and a separate statement revealing that fourth-quarter profit and revenue missed analysts’ projections.

When Chriss was chosen to succeed longtime CEO Dan Schulman in 2023, committed to putting profit first while refocusing the company on PayPal’s branded checkout experience.

However, because Chriss failed to meet the new targets after raising earnings guidance twice, the stock has lagged behind competitors. On Tuesday, executives stated that they were unable to stick to their earlier projections for the upcoming year.

Evercore ISI analyst Adam Frisch stated that the timing of PayPal’s management changes “was probably a bit sooner than most were expecting.”

The key question is whether he will start looking at options for strategic assets or assemble a strong payments team to try yet another multiyear turnaround. Loro spent decades at HP, rising from an engineering internship to positions such as managing HP’s printing division and the office that oversaw the company’s 2015 split from Hewlett Packard Enterprise.

Most recently, Lores has been leading HP through more general industry challenges, such as the unpredictability of US tariffs and the decline in consumer and corporate computer demand. Under Lores, HP had been moving its global supply chain away from China and toward Vietnam, Thailand, India, Mexico, and the United States.

Tariffs threatened to derail the long-struggling personal computer market, which had started to recover last year.

Anthropic AI Tool Sparks Selloff From Software to Broader Market

Anthropic PBC’s new AI automation tool caused stocks in the software, financial services, and asset management industries to plummet by $285 billion on Tuesday as investors rushed to sell shares with even the smallest exposure.

An index of financial services companies fell nearly 7%, while a Goldman Sachs basket of US software stocks fell 6%, its largest one-day drop since the tariff-fueled selloff in April. Before reducing losses to 1.6 percent, the Nasdaq 100 Index dropped as much as 2.4 percent.

 

The selloff began before the opening of the US market, with traders citing a statement on the Anthropic website as the cause of sharp drops in the shares of the London Stock Exchange Group Plc, the business and legal software manufacturer RELX PLC, and the credit and marketing services company Experian Plc.

Shares of Indian IT firms were the most recent to plummet, along with other Asian software stocks. Tata Consultancy Services Bellwether Ltd. declined by up to 6%, while Infosys Ltd. decreased by 7.1%. Xero Ltd. is a cloud-based accounting software provider. dropped as much as 16% during Sydney trading, the highest since 2013.

Asia’s larger tech sector has shown some resilience as hardware manufacturers, especially chipmakers, continue to dominate the market and have benefited greatly from the surge in AI investment.

Anthropic is one of many AI startups creating tools for the legal sector. Startups like Legora and Harvey AI were flooding the legal sector with tools they claimed would spare attorneys from tedious work long before Anthropic’s plugin. For over two years, investors have been pouring money into AI products for the legal sector.

Legora raised money at a $1.8 billion valuation in October, while Harvey AI was valued at $5 billion in June. In contrast, Anthropic creates its own models that can be tailored to the particular requirements of an industry. It has the distinct advantage of upending both established legal news and data services and legal AI startups, given its position as a major model developer in the AI ecosystem.

Oracle Raises $25B in Bonds, Calms Fears of AI Debt Wave

Oracle’s debt has been trading like junk for weeks amid worries that its investments in artificial intelligence won’t pay off for years, if at all.

Pressure Builds on Oracle as Margins and Momentum Fade

Those concerns seemed to subside following the software giant’s record-breaking demand for a $25 billion bond sale on Monday.

Oracle’s announcement on Sunday that it would raise roughly $25 billion in equity in addition to debt this year, assuring investors that it wouldn’t put undue strain on its balance sheet as it finances significant investments in data centers, was the catalyst for the change.

Both the tech company’s stock and bonds saw gains for most of the session. Some investors expressed optimism that could extend to the larger credit market following the company’s fundraising.

US high-grade corporate bond sales could reach record levels this year, with Morgan Stanley strategists last year forecasting about $2.25 trillion of issuance. However, investor demand for securities is still high, partly due to the continued strength of corporate profits.

The bonds’ risk premiums are nearing multi-decade lows. More than $129 billion worth of Oracle bonds were ordered by investors, surpassing the previous record of $125 billion when Meta Platforms sold $30 billion in bonds in October. According to a statement released on Sunday, the company does not anticipate selling more debt in 2026. Oracle was predicted by some bond investors to sell between $40 billion and $60 billion worth of debt this year.

China Pulls Plug on Silver Speculation: UBS Fund Suspended All Day in Risk Clampdown

China suspended trading of five commodity funds to reduce the underlying risks of investment mania in gold, silver, and oil, and to stop the mania of gold, silver, and oil investors.

Silver’s Momentum Reset Sets the Stage for the Next Leg Higher

The only public fund investing in silver futures in mainland China, UBS SDIC Silver Futures Fund, a listed open-ended fund (LOF), will be suspended for the entire day on Friday, the second such halt since January 22.

The only public fund in China that makes direct investments in silver futures, the UBS SDIC Silver Futures Fund, was suspended for the duration of the trading day. After several risk alerts and brief pauses since late 2025, this is its second full-day suspension since January 22.

The fund has traded at unsustainable premiums—around 36 percent over Shanghai Futures Exchange silver contracts—driven by speculative demand, social media hype, and limited alternatives for Chinese investors to gain exposure to silver.

Shorter one-hour suspensions (until 10:30 a.m.) were imposed on four oil LOFs.  According to analysts quoted in reports, these halts are intended to preserve capital market stability, shield retail investors from potential “huge losses” if conditions abruptly reverse, and lower underlying systemic risks.

A significant increase in silver and gold prices, driven by geopolitical tensions and supply limitations (including China’s previous export restrictions), is among the background factors.

Chinese investors’ speculative demand,  demonstrated by the premiums local prices have earned over international benchmarks, contributed to the increase in global prices. There have also been other indications of high demand. With warnings that the premium over Shanghai Futures Exchange contracts is “unsustainable,”

China’s sole pure-play silver fund temporarily stopped trading this week and turned away new clients. Citigroup Inc. stated earlier this week that “Chinese retail investors tend to be trend-following, like traders in US futures and derivatives markets.”

The bank projected that silver would reach $150 in three months and that strong buying would continue “due to robust short-term momentum.” Gold prices have risen alongside demand from exchange-traded funds backed by the metal. However, ETF withdrawals have not stopped silver’s recent sharp increases.

Gold’s Sharp Correction Pauses: Traders Weigh Exit From Overheated Rally

Gold recovered some of its losses as traders assessed the sudden end of a record-breaking rally following yet another strong selloff during London trading hours.

Geopolitical Risks and Fed Easing Outlook Reinforce Gold’s Bullish Case

The announcement that US President Donald Trump would appoint Kevin Warsh to head the Fed was the catalyst for Friday’s dramatic selloff. This news caused the dollar to rise and undermined confidence among investors who had wagered on Trump’s willingness to allow the currency to decline.

Chinese traders had consistently pushed prices higher; however, on Friday, this reversed, and gold and silver fell during the Asian session. That dynamic persisted, with pressure on precious metals as the Shanghai night market opened on Monday.

Silver fell by almost 6% after falling 16% earlier and recording an intraday decline on Friday. Even seasoned traders were taken aback by gold’s record highs.

Investors poured money into gold and silver in January amid concerns about geopolitical unrest, currency depreciation, and challenges to the Federal Reserve’s independence, intensifying an already intense rally. The rally was made more frothy by a surge of purchases from Chinese speculators.

According to Robert Gottlieb, a former precious metals trader at JPMorgan Chase and Co., “the trade was way too crowded,” and now an independent market analyst, adding that market liquidity would be hampered by a reluctance to take additional chances

Expectations of tighter monetary policy that would support the dollar and devalue bullion priced in US dollars have been raised by traders who view Warsh, who was later confirmed as the nominee, as the most formidable inflation fighter among the final contenders.

 

 

How China Pumped Gold, Silver to the Moon—Then Crashed Them Back to Earth

Prices for everything from gold to copper and tin appeared to defy supply/demand fundamentals because of a surge of hot money from Chinese speculators, leaving traders in the metals market glued to screens.

Dow Gains Ground While Investors Watch US-China Dialogue Unfold

The rally then turned into one of the most spectacular crashes in commodity market history in a matter of hours. Gold fell 9 percent on its worst day in over ten years, while silver saw its largest-ever 26 percent decline on Friday. After an abrupt surge above $14,500 per ton that quickly collapsed, copper traders were already in shock.

Many had warned that the metals markets were overstretched and ready for a correction after weeks of unrelenting surges. News that US President Donald Trump intended to nominate Kevin Warsh to lead the Federal Reserve was the catalyst for Friday’s crash, sending the dollar higher. Even so, the magnitude and speed of the decline were astounding, especially for a market as big and liquid as gold.

Unwilling to miss the Asian trading day, when many of the biggest moves have occurred, metals traders in the US and Europe have been working nonstop. They have even been frantically trading via long-distance flights. Executives watched in silence as the crisis developed while staring at their phones at the largest coin conference in the world, held in Germany last week.

However, in recent weeks, the gains have accelerated due to a surge in purchases by Chinese speculators, ranging from individual investors to large equity funds entering the commodities market. This has caused metals like copper and silver to reach all-time highs. Trend-following commodity trading advisors poured in as prices skyrocketed, intensifying the rally.

The increase in metals became a symbol of some investors’ growing mistrust of the US dollar as worries about the Fed’s independence and geopolitical conflicts from Iran to Venezuela dominated the news. Gold and silver fever swept consumers from China to Germany as the metals’ upward momentum attracted more buyers.

The scenes were reminiscent of 1979–1980, the only other period in modern history when the markets saw such sharp price swings.

President Trump Links Tariff Relief for India to Pledge to Stop Buying Russian Oil

President Donald Trump promised to remove punitive tariffs on India in exchange for Prime Minister Narendra Modi ceasing to purchase Russian oil. Trump announced on social media that he would lower the US levy on Indian goods from 25 percent to 18 percent after speaking with Modi over the phone.

According to officials familiar with the situation, the US president is also lifting an additional punitive 25 percent duty that was imposed in response to India’s purchases of crude from Russia. Trump wrote that India would “move forward to reduce their tariffs and non-tariff barriers against the United States, to ZERO” and buy “over 500 BILLION DOLLARS of U.S. Coal, energy, technology, agriculture, and numerous other goods

Modi announced on social media that “Made in India products will now have a reduced tariff of 18 percent,” confirming the agreement. He gave no additional information on oil or agricultural imports, which are two of New Delhi’s main points of contention.

India has not historically imported Russian crude, but after Moscow’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, when trade flows were disrupted, and bargains became alluring, it became a significant buyer. Shipments have slowed but not stopped as a result of the Trump administration’s attempts to cut off Russia’s supplies to India.

Trump also declared in October that Modi had consented to stop buying Russian oil. However, Indian refiners kept buying cheap crude from Moscow in the absence of a solid trade agreement.