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By Adrian Ash |
June 10, 2013
The gold price rallied from a one-week low at $1,376 per ounce Monday morning in London, edging back up to £1,383 as world stock markets rose.
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By Ben Traynor |
March 27, 2013
Wholesale gold bullion prices fell as low as $1,591 an ounce Wednesday morning, extending losses from a day earlier following news of Cyprus's bailout as well as positive U.S. economic data.
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By Sally Lowder |
March 20, 2013
For resource expert Joachim Berlenbach copper is shining brighter than gold — he even does some back-of-the-envelope calculations to show how global development could create a serious supply bottleneck.
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By Frank Holmes |
March 20, 2013
Would it surprise you to discover that China is planning to add 800 miles to its subway system over the next two years? That’s the distance equivalent to building a network from Dallas to Chicago in less time than the U.S. Congress can resolve a budget!
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By Adrian Ash |
March 20, 2013
You'd think that with all this practice, politicians would know how to handle a banking crisis by now. Most especially in the Eurozone.
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By Przemyslaw Radomski |
February 6, 2013
Every now and then we receive questions about JPMorgan and the allegations that the company suppresses the price of silver. In our Q&A section we answered some of those concerns.
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By Adrian Ash |
January 17, 2013
Full-year 2012 gold data from Thomson Reuters GFMS yesterday estimated gold demand from all central banks, as a group, at a half-century high of 536 tonnes, up 17% from 2011.
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By Peter Schiff |
December 6, 2012
When the global markets finally wrap their heads around the scale of US insolvency, the response will be as fierce as it is rapid. In such a once-in-a-century scenario, physical gold and silver are among the few assets without counterparty risk.
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By Eric Sprott, David Baker |
November 30, 2012
If global banks’ are realistically going to improve their balance sheet diversification and liquidity profiles, gold will have to be part of that process. It is ludicrous to expect banking to regain a sure footing through the increased ownership of government securities.
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By Vin Maru |
November 29, 2012
Lately we have seen many articles about China and many other central banks continuing to buy and increase their holdings of gold as part of their effort to continue diversifying out of foreign paper currencies. Who can blame them?