and slip in Asia after SHFE raised margin requirements, increasing the cost and risk of speculative trades amid elevated volatility.
- Margin requirements increased at SHFE
- The move follows similar steps to other exchanges
Summary
Gold and silver eased after the Shanghai Futures Exchange lifted margin requirements and set wide daily trading limits on new contracts, raising the cost and risk of holding speculative positions. The broader macro backdrop hasn’t changed, but a growing list of volatility controls is tightening conditions for leveraged traders, leaving the metals rally vulnerable if momentum starts to fade.
Margin Hikes Dent Rally
The Shanghai Futures Exchange has raised the cost of holding speculative positions in gold and silver, which may have contributed to the early pullback seen in Asia after the changes took effect. Daily trading ranges of +/-17% for gold and +/-20% for silver are now in place, while margin requirements for speculative positions have been increased to 19% for gold and 22% for silver.
In simple terms, traders now need to put up more cash to hold the same positions, with a greater risk of being caught on the wrong side of sharp moves once those limits come into play. With the changes only taking effect into the Asian open, some participants likely opted to reduce or liquidate exposure, pressuring gold and silver despite no change in underlying fundamentals.
Taken in isolation, the latest margin hike is not a reason to sell gold or silver. But layered on top of earlier increases, and similar margin tightening announced by the CME Group late last week in response to extreme volatility, participation in the metals rally is becoming incrementally more punitive. Like a boa constrictor, tighter margins are slowly squeezing fresh speculators, raising the risk that a crowded trade could unravel if the latest rebound starts to falter.
Gold Rebound Stalls Below Familiar Level

Source: TradingView
The bullish move in gold from the 6 February low has slowed over the past day, with the price again struggling beneath $5100, as was the case earlier this month and for a period in late January ahead of the sharp bearish unwind. As a result, it’s the immediate level of focus on the topside. On the downside, $4990 should be on the radar, with pullbacks towards that level bought over the past day, including on the latest bar. That defines the near-term range when assessing setups.
I’m far less inclined to place significant weight on price signals from this timeframe given the hit-and-miss track record since the late-January rout. As with the recent flattening in the bullish move, momentum indicators are also flashing some caution. RSI (14) is rolling over and only marginally above the neutral 50 level, while MACD is flattening after just nudging into positive territory. Momentum signals are therefore neutral overall, placing greater emphasis on price action to dictate trade selection rather than sticking with a fixed directional bias.
If gold can break and hold above $5100, overhead levels of note include $5300, which has seen price action on either side recently, followed by the 30 January high at $5450 and then the record high of $5598. Conversely, if the pullback develops into something more sinister with a clean break below $4990, $4900 moves onto the blotter having capped gains previously. Below that, $4800 remains relevant as a big figure before the 6 February low of $4656 comes back into view.
Silver Bulls’ Eye $84 Hurdle

Source: TradingView
In silver, $84 is the key level to watch on the topside, having provided both support and resistance at various points this month. On the downside, dips towards and below $79 have been bought in recent days, defining a clear initial range for traders to work with. As with gold, I’m not placing much weight on the bearish engulfing candle seen the session before last, despite its bearish implications. There have simply been too many false signals to trust.
If the bullish move resumes with a break above $84, it could be used to establish fresh longs with a stop below, initially targeting the 4 February high at $92.20. Beyond that, $95.90 and $102 come into view should we see a more meaningful extension back towards record highs. Below $79, $75 is the next level of focus after capping advances in the early stages of the recovery, with the 6 February low at $64.09 the next reference beneath that.
Momentum remains neutral, with RSI (14) flatlining around the 50 level and MACD struggling to push into positive territory, reinforcing the view that price action around known levels is likely to be more instructive



















































