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By Ron Hera |
April 16, 2012
The history of the US dollar is closely linked to US involvement in a series of wars. The loss of value in the dollar caused by excessive expansion of the money supply, together with rising demand for raw materials, has led to permanently higher global commodity prices.
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By David Coffin, Eric Coffin |
January 24, 2012
We are extremely comfortable that our prognosticating for 2012 may or may not work out. Which puts us in the same camp as most others. That said, a contrarian turn does seem to be gaining ground in the market.
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By Jon Nadler |
December 28, 2011
Gold prices drifted even lower overnight and this morning as year-end sellers once again cashed still-profitable chips in and opted to park proceeds in cash at least until the first week of 2012 draws to a close.
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By George Mack |
October 14, 2011
The founder of Longwave Analytics and Longwave Strategies proposes physical gold and certain gold stocks will be investors' best hedge and overall solution while sharing his thoughts on the current economic mess.
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By Karen Roche, JT Long |
September 26, 2011
The Western world's opposition when it comes to nuclear energy won't stand in the way of its production elsewhere. It will be full steam ahead in China, India and other developing nations, says Casey Research Chairman Doug Casey.
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By David Coffin, Eric Coffin |
April 25, 2011
Base metals and globally priced commodities more generally continue to see support from US dollar weakness. Dollar weakness and inflation are somewhat perversely linked.
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By Jon Nadler |
April 15, 2011
Precious metals trading showed some indecision and a bit of nervousness during the first hour of dealings in New York this morning. Such patterns are not uncommon following fresh record achievements.
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By Toby Connor |
August 25, 2010
After the aggressive collapse we've seen in the dollar over the last couple of months, there seems to be little question the dollar has begun working its way down into a yearly cycle low.
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By Gary Dorsch |
June 3, 2010
There are latent fears that a Euro-zone "credit crunch," is looming on the horizon which could put the $14-trillion Euro-zone economy, into a deep freeze.
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By Peter Schiff |
April 2, 2010
Now that the real estate bubble has burst, the Fed is inflating the biggest bubble of them all -- a bubble in government.