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By Joe Richter and Debarati Roy, Bloomberg |
May 14, 2013
Consumers will sell the least used gold in five years after prices tumbled into a bear market, curbing a source of metal that typically accounts for about one in every three ounces of global supply.
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By Ben Traynor |
May 8, 2013
Wholesale market prices for buying gold climbed back above $1,460 an ounce during Wednesday morning's London trading, in line with its range over the last week, as stocks gained.
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By Mark O'Byrne |
April 30, 2013
Australia’s Perth Mint, the largest refinery in Australia and one of the largest in the world, said that demand has jumped to the highest level since the Lehman crisis in 2008.
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By Alasdair Macleod |
April 25, 2013
The recent slide in the gold price has generated substantial demand for bullion that will likely bring forward a financial and systemic disaster for both central and bullion banks that has been brewing for a long time.
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By Ross Norman |
April 24, 2013
There an oddity about gold at the moment with phenomenal physical demand in Asia, U.S. and Europe, while the actual spot prices languishes. We have written before about the strange disconnect between paper and physical demand but rarely has there been such a clear divergence.
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By Mark O'Byrne |
April 23, 2013
Asia is seeing a new gold rush. Demand for gold bars, coins and jewelry has soared as bargain hunters try to capitalize on the dip in prices.
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By Dr. Jeffrey Lewis |
April 19, 2013
The precious metals have seen dramatic sell-offs before, although the primary difference between previous precious metal declines and the recent drop is the current shortage of physical metal.
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By Ben Traynor |
April 18, 2013
Wholesale prices for buying gold climbed briefly above $1,400 an ounce Thursday morning, having bounced from a $50-an-ounce drop overnight, with dealers reporting strong demand for physical bullion in Asia.
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By Mark O'Byrne |
April 15, 2013
There is blood running in the gold market this morning after vicious selling, which began on Friday afternoon and continued in Asian trading and through into European trading.
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By Jeff Berwick |
April 9, 2013
Back in 2008, silver fell from more than $20 per ounce down to less than $10. This was a stomach-turning experience for those who had begun investing heavily in the metal.