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    Home/Investing/Precious Metals Price Update: Gold, Silver, PGMs Stage Recovery After Crash
    Investing

    Precious Metals Price Update: Gold, Silver, PGMs Stage Recovery After Crash

    February 5, 2026 3 Min Read

    It’s been a wild week of ups and downs for precious metals prices.

    Gold, silver and platinum have already recorded new all-time highs in 2026. But this week, the rally reversed course — only briefly, but in a big way, as is the case with such highly volatile markets.

    Let’s take a look at what got the precious metals moving over the past week.

    Gold price

    After hitting a record high of close to US$5,600 per ounce, gold closed out January by embarking on one of the biggest price slides it’s seen in decades. By early morning trading on Monday (February 2), the yellow metal had dropped as low as US$4,400 for a significant loss of more than 21 percent.

    However, gold regained much of that lost ground by Tuesday’s (February 3) close, trading back above US$4,935. By Wednesday (February 4) morning, gold was once again back above the key psychological US$5,000 mark, although it couldn’t maintain that level for long and slipped back down into the US$4,900 range.

    Gold price chart, January 28, 2025, to February 4, 2026.

    The primary drivers for gold this past week are:

            Silver price

            The silver price has tracked gold on these macro trends. The white metal fell from the all-time high of more than US$120 per ounce that it reached on January 29 to a low of about US$71 on Monday.

            Silver price chart, January 28, 2025, to February 4, 2026.

            Although silver lost 35 percent from its peak in such a short time, the precious metal has rebounded to an intraday high of US$92.32 as its fundamentals remain strong.

            Platinum price

            Platinum tracked its precious metal sisters down from a January 29 high of US$2,816 per ounce to as low as US$1,882. By Tuesday, the metal was back above US$2,200 and has traded mostly around that price mark for Wednesday.

            Platinum price chart, January 28, 2025, to February 4, 2026.

            Platinum is one of the top-performing metals over the past year, reaching 12 year highs in recent weeks. Demand is being driven by the metal’s essential role in the emerging hydrogen economy. Its also still seeing robust demand from the auto sector despite the emergence of electric vehicles and uneasy consumer confidence in the economy.

            On the supply side, global platinum reserves remain critically low, especially as the world’s biggest producer, South Africa, continues to be plagued by power shortages and operational disruptions.

            Palladium price

            Palladium has been the black sheep of the precious metals family for the past few years, remaining well below its March 2022 all-time record of US$3,440.76 per ounce.

            On January 29, palladium got in on the party and rallied to an intraday high of US$2,172.50.

            Then on Monday it came along for the slide, falling as low as US$1,529. After a slight rebound on Tuesday, the precious metal has traded around US$1,700 to US$1,800.

            Palladium price chart, January 28, 2025, to February 4, 2026.

            The palladium price is being held down by a slump in demand for electric vehicles and a looming oversupply situation. Analysts at Heraeus and Metals Focus predict the palladium market may move into a surplus in 2026 as secondary supply from recycling increases by 10 percent.

            Securities Disclosure: I, Melissa Pistilli, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

            This post appeared first on investingnews.com

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