This interview with Stefan Gleason offers more than a company profile—it’s a window into what ethical leadership looks like in the bullion business.
With gold setting record after record, people are scrambling to cash in by selling scrap gold and jewelry.
As was expected, the Fed held interest rates steady at the meeting, taking a “wait and see” attitude.
Maharrey predicts that when the next economic shock strikes—possibly triggered by tariffs or debt bubbles—American gold demand will surge again.
The gold price, at least thus far, is signaling that the bottom in confidence remains out of sight.
Asian investors primarily drove demand for gold bars and coins as American investors continued to sit on the sidelines.
Gold has broken through $3,000. Headlines are buzzing. And investors are asking: Is it time to sell?
In another sign that things aren’t so great on Main Street, bankruptcy inquiries hit pandemic-level highs in Q1.
Replacing with tariffs what the government raises from income taxes may require raising tariffs even higher than President Trump’s “liberation” tariffs.
Official net gold purchases came in at 244 tonnes, 21 percent below Q1 2024 (310 tonnes), but 25 percent above the five-year quarterly average.