Exploration budgets are finally starting to climb, which is a sign of increased confidence in future gold prices. Here are the details...
Once the real move starts, it will be very difficult to get hold of gold at any price. At some point there will no physical gold on offer. Egon explains...
TF Metals Report's Craig Hemke tells Silver Doctors this year could be the best for gold since the beginning of the decade. Here's what else Craig says...
Where are we right now in the natural resources boom/bust/echo cycle, and what a opportunities are there? Marin explains...
GOOD & BAD news with online bullion sales taxing, and the Industry Council for Tangible Assets' Executive Director joins Metals & Markets to discuss it all...
Chris says that silver is the real gem of the precious metals world, with a much bigger upside potential than gold. Here's why...
SD Friday Wrap: Have gold & silver been unfriended, or is there something much worse going on, like chains and torture in a dark, damp basement?
The 10-year yield edged down to 2.589%, but the DX was steady between 96.56-96.61. Gold was $1,302 bid at 4PM with a gain of $6.
Market strategist Nick Santiago expects gold to break out in the next two or three years and to rise to $5000 - $7500 around 2025 - 2027...
"Meanwhile, the so-called 'take this job and shove it indicator', the quits level, also confirmed the latest labor market strength, rising by 99K to 3.490MM."
Well, if you're any kind of news junkie, you probably know that the Senate voted this week to reject President Trump's national emergency declaration. But fear ye not - there are plenty of other national emergencies on the table!
"The Fed, which has been paring its crisis-era debt holdings, may lay out plans to end the program at its meeting next week. Yet in the Treasury market, the close of the quantitative-easing era could open another can of worms."
"When it comes to China: i) all of the country's economic data is utterly meaningless as it is entirely fabricated and ii) Beijing has an annoying Trotskyite habit of doing precisely what it vows not to do or accuses others of doing."
“Pity the nation whose people are sheep And whose shepherds mislead them Pity the nation whose leaders are liars Whose sages are silenced And whose bigots haunt the airwaves Pity the nation that raises not its voice Except to praise conquerors And acclaim the bully as hero And aims to rule the world By force and by torture… Pity the nation oh pity the people who allow their rights to erode
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell appeared on 60 Minutes last Sunday to reassure us that the US economy is great. There's nothing to worry about. So, why the sudden reversal in Fed monetary policy? According to Powell, the central bank is just worried about slowing global growth. But as Mike Maharrey discusses in this week's Friday Gold Wrap, it's pretty clear the real problems are right here in the good ol' US of A. Mike also covers the latest in precious metals news, with a focus on silver.
It's a stealthy and shrewd move, as Germany prepares to poach top talent from banks soon to be jolted by the uncertain fallout from Brexit.
TraderStef cuts right though the ongoing Price Derangement Syndrome to explain the true fundamentals & technicals in the gold market...
Mario Draghi puts a cherry on the top of a disastrous stimulus sundae, ending his 8-year tenure of absurdly loose policy with one last printing-press blast. Eurozone, prepare to be haunted by his decisions for decades to come.
No-deal Brexit? Even as the whole of Europe verges on a potentially chaotic dissolution, the white-hot furnace that used to be China's economy is rapidly cooling, and that might pose the biggest risk of all.
"The decision comes as Switzerland's largest bank struggles to move on from legal issues stemming from its core wealth-management business."