Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Gold touched a record high on Monday and silver prices neared 12-year highs as this year's rally in the metals market continues.Gold futures traded hands just above $2,450 per ounce during early ...
Gold futures were higher at $2,438.50. Spot silver also rose to $32.17, an over 11-year high. For comparison, consider the price of gold over the past couple decades. After a June 2001 average of ...
In 2013 the unit price paid for pure silver was up six cents to $4.12 (incl gold $4.65) while the realized price was down 717 cents to $23.86 (incl gold $23.58). In 2011 though the unit price paid per silver equivalent ounce was only five cents higher at $4.09 it sold each ounce for 67.6% more, in 2010 it was 36.6% more.
He remains bullish and thinks gold has yet to reach its final high, noting, “There's nothing in the price chart of gold that suggests a final top is in.”. So far this year, gold futures have ...
SPDR Gold Shares are designed to initially track the price of a tenth of a troy ounce of gold. If the share price differs from the gold market price, the fund's manager exchanges blocks of 100,000 shares for 10,000 ounces of gold. The possibility of such exchanges keeps the ETF price roughly in line with the gold price, although the prices can ...
For example, if one owns a share in a gold mine where the costs of production are US$300 per troy ounce ($9.6 per gram) and the price of gold is $600 per troy ounce ($19/g), the mine's profit margin will be $300. A 10% increase in the gold price to $660 per troy ounce ($21/g) will push that margin up to $360, which represents a 20% increase in ...
That compares to just $1,893.66 for that same ounce of gold. In other words, investors would have about 119 times more money by investing in a diversified portfolio of large stocks than by ...
In 1792, the gold/silver price ratio was fixed by law in the United States at 15:1, which meant that one troy ounce of gold was worth 15 troy ounces of silver; a ratio of 15.5:1 was enacted in France in 1803. The average gold/silver price ratio during the 20th century, however, was 47:1.