President Trump posting less on market

The bank’s analysts found that only 10% of the 126 posts Trump had published this time around on sensitive topics such as trade tariffs, foreign relations and economics had caused clear currency market moves.

“Among the different topics, the posts on tariffs have been the biggest market movers,” JPMorgan’s note published on Monday said, adding that closer to a third of those ones had been market moving.

Source – KITCO News / Reuters

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    Experts have confirmed that dozens of gold coins scattered across the ocean floor off the coast of Colombia belonged to the San José, an ill-fated Spanish treasure galleon that sank over 300 years ago during a battle with British warships. The findings were published on June 10 in the journal Antiquity.

    The 64-gun, three-masted Spanish flagship alone carried as much as 200 tons of treasure with a modern value estimated as high as $17 billion by today’s standards.

    The key pieces of evidence were dozens of rough gold coins sitting on the ocean floor. The treasure had an average diameter of 1.3 inches and each weighed around one ounce.

    “Hand-struck, irregularly shaped coins—known as cobs in English and macuquinas in Spanish—served as the primary currency in the Americas for more than two centuries,” Daniela Vargas Ariza, a maritime archeologist and the study’s lead author said in a statement.

    Source – Popular Science

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    SPDR Gold Shares was rallying a sharp 1.6%

    “Gold bars are bought as a hedge” against tariff-related downside risks to stocks as well as U.S. and global economic growth, commodity analysts at Citigroup said in a research note on Friday after the U.S. stock market’s close. “In precious metals, we see gold moving higher very near term” to $3,000 per ounce, they wrote.

    “Gold has soared to another record high today amid a further ratcheting up in trade tensions,”  said Joe Maher, assistant economist at Capital Economics, in a note Monday. “Concerns that gold may get caught in the trade-war crossfire may also have led U.S. investors to buy up gold in order to get ahead of any future tariffs that might affect U.S. gold imports.”

    Source – Market Watch

  • / /

    Superman silver Coins are available with subscription

    The subscription option for ordering the first numismatic product in the U.S. Mint’s Comic Art Coin and Medal Program is open.

    The subscription option opened June 12 for just one item among  the first issues in the series depicting DC Comics superhero Superman.

    The Son of Krypton’s powerful debut includes a 1-ounce silver medal struck in .999 fine silver, a 2.5-ounce .999 silver medal, and a half-ounce .9999 fine gold $50 coin.

    Only the 1-ounce silver medal is available via subscription, priced at $135. Subscription orders are limited to five medals per household for the first 24 hours, and this order limit is subject to change.

    The Superman products will begin shipping in the fall.

    Source – Coin World

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    Idaho gold mine wins federal approval despite objection

    A contested mine in Central Idaho that will produce gold and antimony earned the U.S. Forest Service’s final approval following a lengthy environmental review and objections from the Nez Perce Tribe, which will lose access for decades to federal lands guaranteed by a U.S. treaty.

    “This approval elevates the Stibnite Gold Project to an elite class of projects in America that have cleared NEPA,” Jon Cherry, Pepetua’s president and CEO, said in a statement.

    “The tribe’s treaties with the United States are the supreme law of the land and remain binding,”

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    Gold recession warning

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    Craig Hemke is a precious metals analyst.

    Source – The Jerusalem Post