-
By Adrian Ash |
May 6, 2013
Athens' strikers burnt a giant picture of Angela Merkel dressed as Hitler. Students in Washington threw bags of urine at each other. But in the Eccles Building? "Fiscal policy is restraining economic growth," said the Federal Reserve.
-
By Ben Traynor |
May 1, 2013
Wholesale prices for gold bullion drifted lower Wednesday morning in London, dipping below $1,470 an ounce, although it remained slightly up on where it started the week.
-
By Ben Traynor |
April 12, 2013
"Current momentum favors a test to the downside," say technical analysts at Scotia Mocatta, "but we would not expect significant liquidation until a break of $1,500."
-
By Brian Sylvester |
March 28, 2013
The Guerrero Gold Belt, a sexy, new developing mining district in the state of Guerrero, Mexico, has attracted some exciting explorers that have unearthed key discoveries.
-
By Ben Traynor |
March 22, 2013
Heading into the weekend, gold looked set to record its biggest weekly gain since November by Friday lunchtime in London, up around 1% from last week's close.
-
By Ben Traynor |
March 20, 2013
Gold dropped below $1,610 an ounce Wednesday, as stocks, commodities and the euro all regained some ground lost since news of the Cyprus bailout negotiations broke over the weekend.
-
By Frank Holmes |
March 5, 2013
In 2012, Turkey was the best performer among the emerging markets we track on our Periodic Table showing a decade of returns. All developing countries rose last year, but stocks in Turkey climbed an astounding 56%.
-
By Miguel Perez-Santalla |
February 5, 2013
Last week's unemployment figure for the US showed an uptick to 7.9% – not a significant change. Are we really seeing much of a change in unemployment?
-
By Ben Traynor |
February 4, 2013
Wholesale market gold prices hovered just below $1,665 per ounce Monday morning in London, having failed to hold onto gains in earlier Asian trading, as stocks and commodities also ticked lower along with the euro.
-
By Ben Traynor |
December 3, 2012
Spot market gold prices fell back below $1,715 an ounce Monday morning in London, more-or-less in line with where they were two weeks ago after failing to hold gains made during Asian trading.