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By Maria Kolesnikova, Bloomberg |
April 2, 2013
At a time when U.S. equities are trading near a record and the dollar is having its best start in three years, commodities will finish this quarter little changed from where they were at the end of 2012.
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By Maria Kolesnikova, Bloomberg |
March 15, 2013
Copper analysts are getting less bullish for the first time in three weeks after China, the biggest consumer, said it was on “high alert” over inflation and intensified a campaign to control its property market.
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By Maria Kolesnikova, Bloomberg |
January 17, 2013
JPMorgan Chase & Co. led lending to commodities companies for a third consecutive year even as global financing to the industry fell to the lowest since 2010.
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By Maria Kolesnikova, Bloomberg |
January 17, 2013
Assets in iShares Silver Trust, the biggest exchange-traded fund for the metal, climbed the most in five years as more investors are seeking an alternative to gold.
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By Maria Kolesnikova, Bloomberg |
November 1, 2012
Gold futures rose for a third day in New York, heading for the longest winning streak since Aug. 27, alongside other commodities after China’s manufacturing expanded for the first time in three months.
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By Maria Kolesnikova, Bloomberg |
October 29, 2012
Copper stockpiles in warehouses monitored by the London Metal Exchange jumped the most in four years after deliveries of the metal into Antwerp, Belgium, helping send prices to a seven-week low.
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By Maria Kolesnikova, Bloomberg |
September 20, 2012
The biggest advances in commodities this year may be over because of mounting concern that policy makers aren’t doing enough to bolster economic growth at a time when producers are expanding supply.
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By Maria Kolesnikova, Bloomberg |
June 11, 2012
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. predicted a 29% return over the next year from the Standard & Poor’s GSCI Enhanced Commodity Index, led by energy and industrial-metals investments.
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By Maria Kolesnikova, Bloomberg |
March 21, 2012
Services in commodities hedging provided by banks will shrink and the terms will be stricter because of new regulations adopted since the global financial crisis, Greenwich Associates said.