Wall Street likes certainty. And with Kevin Warsh expected to step into the Fed chair role, some analysts think at least one big question mark has been removed.
But here’s the thing — sometimes when one door closes, two more open.
According to TD Securities’ Bart Melek, Warsh’s nomination clarifies leadership but complicates the rate path. Markets aren’t sure whether he’ll lean dovish and cut rates aggressively, or whether he’ll stay hawkish enough to keep inflation in check.
That uncertainty matters in the short term.
Gold tends to thrive when:
If the new Fed chair doesn’t “put the metal to the pedal,” as Melek put it, some of the momentum behind precious metals could cool temporarily.
But let’s zoom out.
The Fed doesn’t operate in a vacuum. It operates inside the most debt-saturated system in modern history.
And that matters more than one personality shift.
Melek also acknowledged something I’ve been telling readers for a while:
Volatility isn’t going away.
Gold just dropped $200 in minutes this week. That’s not a sleepy safe-haven market — that’s a highly leveraged, globally sensitive monetary asset reacting to thin liquidity and positioning shifts.
Stronger-than-expected employment data.
Inflation surprises.
Chinese New Year liquidity drops.
Retail speculation surges.
It’s a cocktail for instability.
But here’s the part most people miss:
Volatility doesn’t invalidate gold’s role.
It highlights how sensitive the system has become.
When markets feel this fragile, that’s not a signal to ignore hard assets. It’s a reminder of why they exist.
Melek believes silver’s recent surge was fueled in part by a gamma squeeze.
For folks who don’t live in options land, here’s the simple version:
Retail traders piled into leveraged call options.
Market makers had to hedge by buying physical silver.
That buying pressure forced prices higher.
Then positioning reversed.
That’s not organic, steady demand. That’s leverage meeting illiquidity.
And when leverage unwinds, prices snap back.
This is the difference between speculative paper positioning and long-term structural deficits.
Fundamentally, silver remains in supply deficit. That hasn’t changed.
What changed was the speed and aggressiveness of retail speculation.
There’s a big difference.
Now here’s where it gets interesting.
Melek pointed out that if tariff tensions ease or get postponed, inventory builds in metals like copper and silver could reverse.
In other words, some of the price support we’ve seen may be tied to supply chain positioning and inventory hoarding ahead of trade friction.
If tariffs get clarity — and especially if they soften — some of that artificial tightness could unwind.
That’s a fair point.
But let me ask you something:
Are tariffs the core reason governments are drowning in debt?
Are tariffs the reason currencies are steadily losing purchasing power?
Are tariffs the cause of persistent fiscal deficits?
No.
Tariffs affect flows.
Debt affects systems.
Know the difference.
TD Securities forecasts gold averaging $5,000 but not moving dramatically higher in Q2.
Historically speaking, that’s already a strong price.
And they may be right in the near term. Consolidation after record highs is normal. Markets breathe.
But remember something I learned the hard way in my early finance career:
When an asset makes new highs during uncertainty — and refuses to collapse — that’s not weakness.
That’s accumulation.
Short-term profit taking doesn’t negate long-term structural demand.
Look, I’m not dismissing the possibility of a choppy second quarter.
We could see:
But I don’t invest in gold and silver based on one quarter.
I invest in them because:
You don’t buy fire insurance because the weather report says sunshine next week.
You buy it because the structure has risk built into it.
That’s where we are.
Could Q2 cool some of the tailwinds behind precious metals?
Yes.
Could speculative enthusiasm fade?
Probably.
Could tariffs shift supply dynamics temporarily?
Sure.
But none of that changes the long-term role of gold and silver as monetary anchors in an increasingly leveraged world.
Short-term winds shift.
Structural currents don’t.
If you’re relying on mainstream headlines to guide your gold and silver strategy, you’re already behind.
By the time Wall Street reaches consensus on the new Fed chair…
By the time tariff clarity becomes official…
By the time speculative positioning resets…
The move will already be underway.
Inside the Dedollarize Inner Circle, we don’t chase headlines.
We break down:
If Q2 brings consolidation, you’ll want context.
If it brings another surge, you’ll want preparation.
If it brings shock, you’ll want strategy.
Now is the time.
Join the Dedollarize Inner Circle here
Volatility is here to stay.
Make sure you’re not navigating it alone.
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