HomeBack to Home
Search
advanced
AustraliaFranceGermanySouth AfricaUSAThe Daily Reckoning is global
Our newsletter pulls you inside a world of insightful, humorous and contrarian investment advice straight from our global network of experts.

Page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | Next page >>
You are on page 1 of 13
 
Is the Gold Bull Over? - by Bill Bonner

While there is no one to defend the dollar, gold will continue to shine.


Theres Still More Bull in Bullion - by Bill Bonner

Gold could go as high as $2,500 or more in this bull market


The Third Stage of Golds bull market - by Bill Bonner

Soon, the price of gold will hit the $1,000 mark. Then, you will see something unusual…something exciting…something remarkable.


Gold has always held its' value - by Lord William Rees-Mogg

Most investment assets are fiduciary; only a minority of them are 'real' as in the sense of 'real estate'. These 'real' assets tend not to be liquid. Inexperienced investors underrate the importance of the liquidity of an investment. They do not realise that it is one thing to own a marketable security, and quite a different thing to own a house.


Understanding Gold Investment - by Lord William Rees-Mogg

In January 2007, the gold price was around $600 an ounce; at the end of January 2008, the gold price touched a new peak of $929 an ounce. That is a rise of 50% in twelve months. The rapidity of the rise invites the question whether it can be sustained...


Gold Demand Remains Robust - by Rob Mackrill

Hopes are up and so stock markets...Will they get a second helping from the Fed today? They think so and so does gold... It hit a third consecutive all time high reports the FT when the London spot price rose to $929.40 this morning. Supply disruption in South Africa also helped though jewellery demand at this elevated level is flat. As we noted before...those canny Indian housewives are sellers...


Paying a Premium on Gold Coins - by Michael B. Clark

Have you ever noticed that two bullion coins which contain the exact same amount of the same precious metal, can sometimes sell for a different price? For example, at the time of this writing, the spot price of gold is $787.50 per ounce. Yet, numerous dealers quote a selling price of $830.80 for the one-ounce American Gold Eagle, $826.90 for the one-ounce Canadian Gold Maple Leaf, and $819.00 for the one-ounce South African Gold Krugerrand.


Gold Sell Off: Time to Sell or a Chance to Buy? - by Adrian Ash

Gold failed to break above $692 per ounce last Monday the third failure in three weeks. In fact, it began the week trading at a lower price year-on-year the first such loss since the bull market began in 2001. Is last week's sell-off our cue to quit or one last chance to buy gold again before the next "remorse price" hits and we come to regret not buying more below $700...$750...even $800 per ounce...?


Gold Stocks In A Rising Gold Market - by Doug Casey

Doug Casey says the time is ripe for a boom in gold mining stocks but the good news is, it hasnt even started yet...For the very first time in their history, gold stocks are going to have not only the cognoscenti but the unwashed masses piling in. The bull market will be breathtaking when this gets underway...


Gordon Brown's Gold Sell Off Cost Taxpayers 2bn - by Adrian Ash

Thus the biggest financial story in the United Kingdom today bigger even than our unprecedented bubble in credit is that Prudence "ignored advice" before selling half the nation's gold at rock-bottom prices in 1999. You might wonder why the fuss. Accountants at Grant Thornton reckon that Culpability cost taxpayers 2 billion by selling 400 tonnes at the bottom of the market.



FSP Logo