Unique Introduction For Gold-Eagle Readers: Send me an email to [email protected] and I’ll send you my free “Inflation Thunder Now!” gold stocks video report. I’ll also include 3 of my ...
The gold and silver prices are rallying again, with gold back over $4,000 per ounce. It's been a chaotic week, but to catch you up to speed with everything that's going on, Vince Lanci goes through ...
Federal Reserve Governor Stephen Miran says he expects the U.S. central bank to cut interest rates in December, despite the number of non-voting policymakers who may not want to."I expect us to cut in ...
Gold and silver prices are weaker and have lost earlier gains amid selling pressure across most of the raw commodity futures markets today. A sharp sell off in the U.S. stock market today is not ...
The Supreme Court, exhibiting skepticism about the legality of Trump’s tariffs, showed that even they understand that the tariffs 1) are a tax and that they 2) are a tax on Americans. Even the most ...
LONDON () Gold (XAU/USD) edges higher on Thursday, reclaiming the key $4,000 psychological mark as the US Dollar (USD) softens. At the time of writing, XAU/USD is trading around $4,016, extending ...
Dave Hebert, Ph.D, is a senior research fellow at AIER. He was formerly a professor at Aquinas College, Troy University, and Ferris State University. He has also been a fellow with the U.S. Senate ...
Central bank gold buying hit the highest level of the year in September, with several new banks adding to their reserves. Globally, central banks officially added a net 39 tons of gold to their ...
Gold demand grew by 3 percent year-on-year in Q3, hitting 1,313 tonnes, the highest quarterly level in history. Third quarter demand was even more impressive in dollar terms, increasing by 44 percent ...
LONDON () Gold (XAU/USD) holds steady within familiar ranges on Wednesday as a mild risk-off tone across global markets underpins demand for the safe-haven metal. At the time of writing, XAU/USD is ...
The conversation ranges from portfolio construction and the gold–silver ratio to physical market squeezes, refinery flows, and what the Federal Reserve’s latest moves mean for the dollar and bonds.
As noted last week, I am hearing all too much talk about a market crash to feel comfortable in a bearish view beyond the very short-term. Yes, the national debt (along with debts around the globe) is ...