GooGold Search
Precious metals are apparently waking up. And here is where you can find the best deals.

Site:

Precious metals news

The 27 European governments are negotiating for the first time Friday a proposal for 750 billion euros ($841 billion) to tackle the Covid-19 crisis.
The numbers of borrower seeking relief on their mortgage payments has fallen for the third straight week, as more Americans go back to work and cities reopens.
The coronavirus disrupted the start of new clinical trials for potentially life-changing, new medicines and now may delay the time in which some of those drugs will reach the market.
    Coronavirus Live Updates: CNBC
Jun 19, 2020 - 04:53:52 PDT
Global coronavirus cases now top 8.5 million, having added another 1 million cases in just over a week. Hot spots in Latin America and the Middle East have contributed to the rise, with cases still ticking higher in the U.S. and cases in Europe hitting a relative plateau.
    Worse Than Coronavirus?
Jun 19, 2020 - 04:48:28 PDT
As we've been railing on for too long now, the Federal Reserve is NOT serving the interests and welfare of the general public.
Although Gold has yet to really start a massive upside price rally, it could happen at ANY MOMENT. Here's why...
The essential fallacy of John Maynard Keynes and his early disciples was to cultivate the monetary equivalent of alchemy. They believed that paper money was a suitable means to alleviate the fundamental economic problem of scarcity.
"A lost decade" for stocks would reverse a yearslong trend of strong growth for corporate earnings as globalization has already peaked, Bridgewater said.
The US has it all now - deficits, debts, excessive military spending, currency debasement, trade wars, plague, collapse of law & order and riots...
    Democrats Unveil $1.5 Trillion Infrastructure Plan
Jun 18, 2020 - 11:44:30 PDT
House Democrats unveiled a $1.5 trillion infrastructure plan Thursday that calls for a huge increase in funding to repair roads and bridges while expanding broadband access in rural areas.
It could take a year or two for the U.S. economy to return to levels seen before the pandemic, Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank President Loretta Mester said on Thursday.
Quadruple witching, a pandemic, a recession, and a stock market that is looking for reasons to add to an epic recovery from the impact of the coronavirus. Could those factors make for a volatile cocktail for the stock market in coming days and weeks?
Long-term U.S. mortgage rates fell this week as the benchmark 30-year home loan reached a new all-time low. Mortgage buyer Freddie Mac reported Thursday that the...
The pace of corporate borrowing sped up again this week after the Federal Reserve unveiled changes to its $750 billion emergency corporate lending facility on Monday to make it easier for credit to flow to a broad-base of companies during the coronavirus pandemic.
Financial markets across the globe are moving together the most in two decades, in a world where little else matters but the pandemic-driven economic trajectory and Federal Reserve stimulus.One-year correlations across 30 assets, including convertible bonds, commodities and emerging-market...
    If Zombie Companies Don't Die, We'll Pay a Price
Jun 18, 2020 - 10:48:53 PDT
The Fed is lending a lot of companies a lot of money. This week the central bank began buying individual corporate bonds, in addition to the bond exchange-traded funds it has bought already. Meanwhile, its Main Street Lending program has begun buying loans that banks...
The federal government’s Paycheck Protection Program failed to take into account the widely varying needs and limitations of small businesses caught in Covid-19 lockdowns.
When gig workers call to inquire about their benefits in Illinois, they get a message simply stating: "We are closed due to unforeseen circumstances."
Retail sales came in really strong in May, which could strengthen risk appetite, but the Fed is dovish. What does it all mean for the gold market?
    Washington Town Resurrects Wooden Money to Aid Economy
Jun 18, 2020 - 09:53:32 PDT
Decades after it created a similar program during the Great Depression, the city of Tenino, Washington is dipping into its emergency accounts to give people in need up to $300 per month in wooden currency to spend in town.