Arizona Coins & Collectibles (Tucson, AZ)

Founding Member Spotlight: Arizona Coins & Collectibles
I’m proud to welcome Arizona Coins & Collectibles as a Founding Member of the Victorias Coin National Gold & Silver Dealer Directory.
With over 45 years of experience, this Tucson institution offers:

  • Hundreds of coins from Ancient to Modern
  • Trusted expertise and exceptional service
  • Recognition from the American Numismatic Association for 50 years of consecutive membership
    📍 Tucson, Arizona
    ✔️ Verified March 2026
    🕰️ Established reputation
    🪙 Serving collectors at every level
    Explore their store or visit their eBay shop to browse online.

If you’d like to see their listing please visit the Arizona page and give them a call today or if you’re in the area head on over and meet the team.

-V.

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    United States ranks #5 in gold producers

    As many countries mine for their gold and help their economies in the process, the United States is not the number country in gold.

    According to Luciano Duque, chief investment officer of C3 Bullion, China leads global gold output — followed by Australia, Russia and Canada before the U.S. rounds out the top five. -Source https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/where-does-the-us-rank-among-the-worlds-gold-producers/ar-AA1w1PiK?ocid=socialshare

    There are many benefits to gold and as every day passes it’s growing in price and demand. Many investors will be looking out at the production and where it’s expanding.

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    Want to read more on Gold retirements https://victoriascoin.com/securing-your-retirement-now-with-a-precious-metals-ira/ and secure your retirement NOW!

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    Copper settled above $5

    Copper’s rise is being driven “solely by supply concerns surrounding the potential for universal tariffs to be placed on all imports of copper into the U.S.,” said Natalie Scott-Gray, a senior metals demand analyst at StoneX. The U.S. is “heavily reliant on foreign copper, with imports accounting for [around] 45% of demand.”

    Copper prices have climbed more than 23% in 2025 through Monday, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    Source – Market Watch

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    Gold not expected to do well this week

    Gold prices fell on Friday and were poised for their worst weekly performance in more than a month after the Federal Reserve tempered expectations for rate cuts and on a temporary easing of concerns about an imminent U.S. attack on Iran.

    Spot gold slipped 0.7% to $3,347.80 an ounce, as of 1201 GMT, and was down 2.5% for the week so far. U.S. gold futures shed 1.3% to $3,364.00.

    “Gold, silver, and platinum all suffered setbacks as traders booked profits after Wednesday’s FOMC meeting,” said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank.

    “Gold is likely to extend its current consolidation phase with support around $3,320 followed by $3,245.”

    Source – Reuters

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    Gold edges lower, the dollar strengthens

    Gold prices eased on Monday on a firmer dollar, in thin, holiday-season trade and as investors sought further clues on the U.S. Federal Reserve’s monetary policy for next year after its latest meeting signaled easing would be gradual.

    “Presently, we are in a lull for Christmas week with the gold price trending sideways. Federal Reserve policy is clear with expectations of rising interest rates in the second half of the year,” said Michael Langford, chief investment officer at Scorpion Minerals.

    Source – Reuters / written by Anushree Mukherjee

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    Fed’s Hawkish Stance Pressures Gold Prices

    Gold prices dipped on Monday as thin holiday trading kept momentum in check. After last week’s sharp decline, gold is attempting to recover but faces resistance between $2607.25 and $2607.35. A breakout above $2629.13 is possible, but traders will need stronger volumes to drive further gains—something unlikely until after the New Year.

    Treasury yields edged slightly higher to start the week, with the 10-year yield rising to 4.536% and the 2-year yield ticking up to 4.325%. Yields jumped last week following the Fed’s policy update but eased on Friday after softer-than-expected inflation data. The dollar held steady as markets processed the Fed’s outlook for 2025.

    Source – James Hyerczyk / FXEMPIRE