Gold hovers near $5,400, silver steadies as precious metals rally enters 'dangerous phase'
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Senior Business Reporter
Updated
Thu, January 29, 2026 at 4:56 PM EST
2 min read
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Gold (GC=F) hovered near $5,400 after falling from a high north of $5,600 per ounce on Thursday while silver (SI=F) steadied after a choppy session as the precious-metals rally paused.
The volatility came alongside a wider sell-off in the stock market on Thursday with tech declining following Microsoft's (MSFT) quarterly results. The rapid rally in precious metals faced resistance as the US dollar (DX-Y.NYB) rebounded from its lowest level since early 2022.
“The continued surge across metals, especially gold and silver, is entering a dangerous phase, in my opinion,” Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank, said on Thursday.
“The problem is volatility feeding on itself. As price swings intensify, liquidity thins,” he added.
Gold prices had risen roughly 20% year to date as the greenback weakened against other currencies.
Read more: How to invest in gold in 4 steps
Just last week, Goldman Sachs analysts set a year-end price target of $5,400 for gold, with a potential upside risk due to increased participation from private-sector investors.
The precious metal rallied past $5,500 on Wednesday after the Federal Reserve held rates steady, with commentary from Fed Chair Jerome Powell doing little to stop the dollar's slide.
“I see this as a sign that conviction levels in the Dollar-down trade are high,” Robin Brooks, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, wrote in a note on Thursday before gold's descent. He noted that "the weak Dollar is super-charging the debasement trade.”
Silver topped $120 per ounce before paring gains on Thursday. The precious metal is up roughly 50% year to date, following a stunning rally in 2025.
"Silver prices have already significantly overshot our forecasted averages, though calling a top is close to impossible in markets displaying near-parabolic price momentum," JPMorgan analysts noted earlier this month.
Ines Ferre is a senior business reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on X at @ines_ferre.
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