The Singapore Jewellers Association says it expects demand for gold to pick up this year and gold prices may reach US$1,400 per ounce this year, up from some US$1,200 last year. PHOTOS; VIDEOS. File photo. Gold items on sale. The Singapore Jewellers …
This theory is significant because it defies many of the conventional wisdoms that people use to support buying gold. If gold as an inflation hedge, just the opposite would be occurring. As inflation picks up, interest rates should go higher, bond …
Gold is used as a source of storing value in times of recession due to its limited supply. A country's economy is based on gold as it is used as collateral for printing money in the market. Even though the gold purchased by India and China amounted to …
In the following video, Dan Caplinger, The Motley Fool's director of investment planning, looks at the gold market and its prospects for 2014. Dan notes that last year, gold and silver prices plunged, sending SPDR Gold Shares (NYSEMKT: GLD ) and …
Multimedia · Photo. Mark Peterson shows some of the patented technology in his Gold Rush Nugget Bucket, designed for gold prospecting, in his west Eugene shop in Eugene, Ore., on Thursday, January 16, 2014. (Brian Davies/The Register-Guard) …
NEW PROVIDENCE, NJ – New Providence resident Lori Rillo has opened a new business in the Borough, Accessory Plus LLC, located inside of Adams fine mens clothing at 1275 Springfield Avenue. Accessory Plus has a selection of women's accessories which …
As there were no glass artisans he could learn from or train under, he practically blazed the trail in carving glass in the country, thereby elevating what was regarded as a decorative material into the fine arts.” The ingenuity and innovation that …
In the past two years, the university spent about $1.25 million buying nearly an entire town block and slowly moving its fine arts program here, six miles away from its main campus in Harrogate. The school has turned a cinder-block tavern into a …
With precious metals in short supply, the people of Europe began to use what historian David Herlihy calls 'substitute money' – not barter or commodity money, but liquid assets of high value called 'mobilia', such as silver jewelry, furs, fine textiles …