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Friday, May 25th, 2012

Posts Tagged ‘ precious metals ’

Precious Metals Battered

Jul 1st, 2009 | By Doug Casey | Category: Gold Market

Gold held in positive territory until the first hour of New York trading on Tuesday, then really hit the skids, plummeting nearly $20 by late morning before inching forward through the rest of the day, finally finishing at $926.60/oz., down $10.70. Overnight, gold has been trending higher.



Gold Running in Place

Jun 30th, 2009 | By Doug Casey | Category: Gold Market

Gold had a very inconclusive day on Monday, rising from the far East to a peak of $942 in early New York trading, then plunging back to $934 at mid-morning, before moving in fits and starts through the rest of the day, to finish at $937.30/oz., down $1.70. Overnight, gold is trending higher.



Precious Metals Do Little

Jun 29th, 2009 | By Doug Casey | Category: Gold Market

Gold had a very dull day on Friday, rising from Hong Kong through to the first hour in New York, peaking at $948, then getting sold off to the noon hour, where it bottomed at $937, then going essentially flat to the finish at $939.00/oz., up all of 10 cents. For the week, gold tacked on just over half a percent.



Platinum Catches a Spark

Jun 26th, 2009 | By Doug Casey | Category: Gold Market

Gold was dead flat until an hour before New York opened on Thursday, at which point it commenced a daylong rally that pushed it higher, albeit not very dramatically, as it plodded to a finish at $938.90/oz., up $6.80. Overnight, gold is trending higher.



Precious Metals Little Changed Again

Jun 25th, 2009 | By Doug Casey | Category: Gold Market

Gold was near flat until the New York open on Wednesday, at which point it took off, shooting up $15 to $941, but that proved to be the high for the day, as the metal sold off through the Comex and early Globex before leveling off to finish at $931.00/oz., up $4.20. Overnight, gold is little changed.



Precious Metals Go Soft

Jun 24th, 2009 | By Doug Casey | Category: Gold Market

Gold fell below $915 at the mid-point of Hong Kong trading on Tuesday, but that proved to be the low for the day, as the metal rallied from there to the New York open, went flat until mid-morning, when it sold off again, but then pushed higher to the end of the Comex before leveling off through the Globex to finish at $925.80/oz., up $3.20. Overnight, gold has been pushing higher.



Commodities Tell Us the World Wont Stop Turning in a Financial Crisis

Jun 2nd, 2009 | By Dan Denning | Category: Oil Investment & Alternative Energy

Can you believe it’s already June? What a month May was for commodities. They are Lazarus, come from the dead to tell us all that the world will not stop turning if there is a financial crisis in the West. Or something like that.



Gold, Climate Change and the Cap and Trade Revolution

May 28th, 2009 | By Byron King | Category: Gold Market

Last week, I spent a full day in a seminar on climate change. It was a totally sober and professional seminar, sponsored by a group that specializes in continuing legal education for attorneys. I heard talks by a variety of lawyers, academics and regulators, mostly about how “the train has left the station” on climate change and carbon regulation. And wow… has that train ever steamed out. But did you ever hear the conductor call, “All Aboard?” This is a critical matter and here’s the takeaway point: We’re about to see an UTTER TRANSFORMATION of the U.S. economy.



Gold Steady as Dollar Retreats, Risk Aversion Buoys

May 14th, 2009 | By Contrarian Profits | Category: Financial News

Gold tracked back from its lows on Thursday as the dollar retreated from earlier highs, with worse-than-expected U.S. macro data and weaker European equity markets fuelling doubts a recent winning streak was sustainable.



Gold Stocks – the Best Strategy for Portfolio Building

May 12th, 2009 | By Jeff Clark | Category: Featured, Gold Market

October 27, 2008 was the gold mining sector’s Black Monday, the day nearly every stock hit rock bottom. Hindsight makes it plain they got caught in the violent deleveraging that sucked down every equities market in the world.