Flash crash rattles gold markets as Bitcoin holds strong
Gold prices have dropped below $1,700 per ounce this morning in what analysts described as stop-loss driven selling.
Gold prices have tanked during the Monday morning Asian trading session, compounding losses accumulated over the past week.
On August 9, the price of gold quickly fell to its lowest level since March as a flash crash drove prices below $1,700/oz.
According to Tradingview, the price of the precious yellow metal plunged to $1,690/oz during Asian trading hours on Monday. The price of gold has since posted a minor recovery, last changing hands for $1,742/oz at the time of writing.
Gold is currently down by 4% over the past 7 week and 8.7% since trading above $1,900/oz at the end of May. The precious metal has retreated 8% for 2021 so far, and it is currently down 14.6% from its August 2020 all-time high of just below $2,040.
How the hell was I asleep for this flash crash in Gold pic.twitter.com/2Foy7WiOwB
— Chairman Everything-Will-Pump ☝™️ (@chairmanlmao33) August 9, 2021
Forex trader and chart guru, Peter Brandt, attributed the crash to wholesale liquidations, stating: “This has all the finger prints of a bank/brokerage house conducting forced liquidation upon a huge leverage speculator.”
He noted that the leverage ratio on Chicago Mercantile Exchange’s gold markets is roughly 15 to 1, suggesting heavily leveraged traders are driving price action for gold.
Analysts at London trading firm City Index similarly blamed this morning’s crash to “stop-loss related selling in very thin market conditions.”
However, U.S. unemployment figures have also been the catalyst for a decline in commodity prices last week. The unemployment rate dropped more than expected to 5.4% from 5.9%, a new low of the pandemic era according to a Bureau of Labor Statistics report published Friday. With the labor market and economy is broader U.S. economy continuing to heal, City Index concluded:
“The better jobs data sent the US dollar and US bond yields higher, never a good formula for commodities.”
With one BTC currently worth 25 ounces of gold, Bitcoin is down 28.5% from its all-time high against gold — with a single BTC having been worth 35 ounces of gold during Bitcoin’s all-time price high of nearly $65,000 in mid-April. However, one Bitcoin was worth 15.5 ounces of gold at the start of 2021.
At the time of writing, BTC had slumped 2% over the past 24 hours to trade for $43,667, according to CoinGecko.