🚨 THIS DOESN’T FEEL LIKE A COINCIDENCE — AND THAT’S WHY PEOPLE ARE UNCOMFORTABLE

Let’s slow this down and look at what actually happened.

Gold just had one of its ugliest days in decades.
After hitting a record high, it dropped nearly 20% on Jan 30.

Silver was even worse.

Down 27% in one session, almost 40% in two days.

That kind of move doesn’t come from “normal trading.”

Now here’s the part that makes people uneasy.

Right before the dump, JPMorgan Chase publicly floated a very bullish target:
Gold to $6,300 by the end of 2026.

First, optimism.
Then, a violent flush.

And that flush happened right into levels where, according to CME data, JP Morgan significantly reduced a massive silver short — reportedly close to $100B in notional terms.

If this feels familiar, it should.

JP Morgan has already been fined by U.S. regulators for spoofing and manipulation in precious metals in the past.
They paid roughly $920M and admitted wrongdoing.

So when you see:

A bullish call

Followed by a historic selloff

That perfectly cleans out leveraged longs

People are going to connect the dots.

What this looks like — not what anyone needs to prove — is a classic setup:

Price gets dumped fast

Stops get triggered

Longs get liquidated

Forced selling does the rest

That structure works everywhere.
Even in markets worth trillions.

I’ve watched this play out for over 10 years in macro.
Different assets. Same behavior. Same outcome.

And the lesson is always boring, but always true:

👉 Don’t chase green candles.
👉 Pay attention when things turn red and emotional.

That’s usually where the real positioning happens.

I’m not here to hype.
When something matters, I talk about it before it’s obvious.

Stay calm.
Stay patient.
And don’t let fast moves turn you into exit liquidity.