Gold prices dip to $2,575 as investors await the FOMC decision, while silver surges to $30.85 driven by industrial demand and Fed rate cut expectations.
Gold doesn’t correlate strongly to U.S. presidential elections, but has performed slightly better after Democratic wins.
Gold remains steady at $2,580 while silver rises amid growing expectations of a Fed rate cut and FOMC decisions driving precious metals demand higher.
Another assassination attempt on Trump’s life, a highly anticipated FOMC meeting and continued geopolitical tensions make for another exciting week in precious metals
Gold reaches a record $2,557 while silver surges, driven by inflation fears and expected rate cuts.
Exchange CEO estimates just 2% of investors own physical gold and silver as investments. He sees opportunity for demand to grow
Gold remains steady near $2,513, weighed by a stronger US Dollar and upcoming inflation data. Silver holds at $28.23, facing rising demand and Russia’s supply challenges.
Platinum, which has been in a bear market for years, may have found a bottom, according to analysts. The five-day chart looks very strong.
Gold nears $2,500 as China's deflation sparks economic uncertainty, while Silver rallies on First Majestic's $970M acquisition of Gatos Silver, boosting market sentiment.
Last week brought a mixed-bag of precious metals mining news. Harmony reported an increase in net profits but had a stock price drop of about 9%.