Gold (XAU/USD) trades with mild positive bias on Thursday, consolidating recent gains after posting a fresh all-time high near $3,895 on Wednesday. At the time of writing, XAU/USD trades around $3,885 ...
As the gold rally continues, we're in uncharted territory. But what's really shocking about what's happening is that it's not because the dollar is weak that investors keep buying gold. At this point, ...
A few weeks ago the Federal Reserve suggested that they expect inflation to go higher, but they're going to lower interest rates anyway. In response, the gold and silver prices have been soaring ever ...
Despite record-high prices, Indians are holding on to their gold. Since the beginning of the year, gold has soared by 44 percent in rupee terms. That’s on top of a 21 percent gain last year.
The fact that we did see the government shutdown doesn’t change that much. What matters is how long it will remain shut down. And I don’t think that this will happen for any reasonable amount of time.
Rumors of a federal government shutdown are once again swirling. Absent a deal, non-essential agencies will have to suspend operations until legislators put together a spending deal.
Risk-averse markets, following the closure of the US federal government, are boosting demand for precious metals on Wednesday. Gold (XAU/USD) bounced from lows right below $3,800 and has reached fresh ...
Most people define inflation as rising consumer prices. Price inflation is part of the inflationary equation, but inflation also manifests in other ways, for instance, in asset inflation.
Singapore and Hong Kong are seeking to usurp London as the center of the global gold trade, another indication of the yellow metal’s shift from West to East.
In this Money Metals podcast, host Mike Maharrey spoke with Dr. Nomi Prins about the dangerous trajectory of global debt.
The disconnect between gold and real yields reveals a growing investor desire for safety, highlighting a structural shift toward bullion as confidence in sovereign bond markets collapses.
There are two demand drivers for gold. The fear trade has to do with demonetization, currency destruction, and negative real interest rates (interest rates minus inflation), which are usually gold ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results