New York, February 4, 2026, 11:00 EST — Regular session
B2Gold Corp shares slipped roughly 1% to $4.97 by late morning Wednesday, following an earlier bounce up to $5.22. The quick turnaround echoed the volatile swings seen in the gold market.
This is significant because bullion is no longer the quiet “safe haven” it once was. Since last week’s selloff, gold and silver have been swinging wildly. On top of that, CME Group’s hike in margin requirements—that’s the cash collateral needed to hold futures positions—has pushed some leveraged traders to trim their exposure. “Gold and silver are on a rollercoaster ride,” said SP Angel analyst John Meyer. (Reuters)
It wasn’t just one stock slipping. The VanEck Gold Miners ETF dropped 0.9%, and SPDR Gold Shares slipped 0.1%. Shares of Newmont and Kinross also lost ground.
Reuters reported Monday that commodities tumbled after U.S. President Donald Trump named Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve chair, boosting the dollar and unsettling risk assets. “The decision by markets to sell precious metals alongside U.S. equities suggests investors view Warsh as more hawkish,” said Vivek Dhar, commodities strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia. (Reuters)
Not all signals point downward. A Reuters poll released Wednesday found analysts and traders raising their 2026 gold price forecast to a median of $4,746.50 an ounce, driven by central bank buying and geopolitical tensions. “We are entering a period in which the legitimacy and resilience of the institutions … are being tested,” said David Russell, CEO of precious metals dealer and broker GoldCore. (Reuters)
B2Gold is gearing up to report its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 financial results, along with guidance for 2026, once North American markets close on Feb. 18. The company will follow up with a management conference call scheduled for Feb. 19. (Q4 Solutions)
B2Gold, based in Vancouver, runs gold mines across Canada, Mali, Namibia, and the Philippines. Its Goose mine in Nunavut hit first gold in June 2025 and kicked off commercial production by October 2025. (B2Gold)
The downside is clear: miners tend to magnify gold’s wild price moves, and right now, volatility is off the charts. One-week realized volatility in gold — tracking recent price swings — has surged past 90%. Chris Weston from Pepperstone warned that when volatility climbs this high, markets risk becoming “frayed and dysfunctional.” (Reuters)
Traders will be keeping an eye on whether bullion holds steady and if gold miners shift focus back to company-specific factors. For BTG, upcoming guidance on production, costs, and capital spending will likely outweigh any intraday fluctuations.
Feb. 18 is the next key date, with B2Gold scheduled to report after the U.S. market close. This will provide a new gauge of investor sentiment toward gold miners amid a volatile trading environment. (Nasdaq)