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Saturday, September 18, 2010

Factbox: Gold Milestones On The Road To Record High By-sanebull.com

Gold one of most happing metal on earth hit a record high at $1,282.75 an ounce on Friday, boosted by demand from investors for a store of value as uncertainty over the outlook for the global economy persisted.

Following are key dates in gold's trading history since the early 1970s:

* August 1971 - U.S. President Richard Nixon takes the dollar off the gold standard, which had been in place with minor modifications since the Bretton Woods Agreement of 1944 fixed the conversion rate for one Troy ounce of gold at $35.

* August 1972 - The United States devalues the dollar to $38 per ounce of gold.

* March 1973 - Most major countries adopt floating exchange rate system.

* May 1973 - U.S. devalues dollar to $42.22 per ounce.

* January 1980 - Gold hits record high at $850 per ounce. High inflation because of strong oil prices, Soviet intervention in Afghanistan and the impact of the Iranian revolution prompt investors to move into the metal.

* August 1999 - Gold falls to a low at $251.70 on worries about central banks reducing reserves of gold bullion and mining companies selling gold in forward markets to protect against falling prices.

* October 1999 - Gold reaches a two-year high at $338 after agreement to limit gold sales by 15 European central banks. Market sentiment toward gold begins to turn more positive.

* February 2003 - Gold reaches a 4- year high on safe-haven buying in the run-up to war with Iraq.

* December 2003-January 2004 - Gold breaks above $400, reaching levels last traded in 1988. Investors increasingly buy gold as risk insurance for portfolios.

* November 2005 - Spot gold breaches $500 for the first time since December 1987, when spot hit $502.97.

* April 11, 2006 - Gold prices surpass $600, the highest point since December 1980, with funds and investors pouring money into commodities on a weak dollar, firm oil prices and geopolitical worries.

* May 12, 2006 - Gold prices peak at $730 an ounce with funds and investors pouring money into commodities on a weak dollar, firm oil prices and political tensions over Iran's nuclear ambitions.

* June 14, 2006 - Gold falls 26 percent to $543 from its 26-year peak after investors and speculators sell out of commodity positions.

* November 7, 2007 - Spot gold hits a 28-year high of $845.40 an ounce.

* January 2, 2008 - Spot gold breaks above $850.

* March 13, 2008 - Benchmark gold contract trades over $1,000 for the first time in U.S. futures market.

* March 17, 2008 - Spot gold hits an all-time high of $1,030.80 an ounce. U.S. gold futures touch record peak of $1,033.90.

* September 17, 2008 - Spot gold rises by nearly $90 an ounce, a record one-day gain, as investors seek safety amid turmoil on the equity markets.

* Jan-March 2009 - Gold-backed exchange-traded funds report record inflows in the first quarter as financial sector insecurity spurs safe-haven buying. Holdings of the largest, the SPDR Gold Trust, rise 45 percent to 1,127.44 tons.

* February 20, 2009 - Gold rises back above $1,000 an ounce to a peak of $1,005.40 as investors buy bullion as a safe store of value as major economies face recession and equity markets tumble.

* April 24, 2009 - China announces it has raised its gold reserves by three quarters since 2003 and now holds 1,054 tons of the precious metal, boosting expectations it may add further to its reserves.

* August 7, 2009 - European central banks opt to renew their earlier agreement to limit gold sales over a five-year period, setting the sales cap at 400 tons a year.

* September 8, 2009 - Gold breaks back through $1,000 an ounce for the first time since February 2009 on dollar weakness and concerns over the sustainability of the economic recovery.

* December 1, 2009 - Gold climbs above $1,200 an ounce for the first time as the dollar drops.

* December 3, 2009 - Gold hits record high at $1,226.10 an ounce, with dollar weakness and expectations for central banks to diversify reserves into gold driving prices higher.

* May 11, 2010 - Gold reaches fresh record high above $1,230 an ounce as fears over the contagion of debt issues in the euro zone fuel safe-haven buying.

* June 21, 2010 - Gold jumps to a new high at $1,264.90 an ounce as underlying fears over financial market stability and sovereign risk combine with dollar weakness to push the metal through resistance at its previous high.

* Sept 14, 2010 - Gold climbs back to record highs, this time at $1,269.30 as global markets reflect renewed uncertainty on the economic outlook.

* Sept 16, 2010 - Gold rises to record highs at $1,275.95, driven by a softer dollar and uncertainty about economic and financial stability that keeps investors flocking into bullion as a store of value.

(Compiled by Atul Prakash and Jan Harvey; Editing by Veronica Brown)


Widget For World Wide Stock And Commodity Market For Your Blog, Webpage, Website.




HI search freaks , here I would like to write about a world wide share market widget, which will show you the world wise stock market data. Ya you can definitely put or display that widget on your Blog, Webpage, or Website. So here is a widget which will show world wide share market Live data on your Blog, Webpage, Website. Ya its Live World wide stock market data! The world market widget code is in HTML and it is very easy to put on the Blog, Webpage, Websits.



This widget never stops monitoring the world, It will keep you up to date with the market around the world. so you will see continuous updates of many world market exchanges. Configurable to poll markets by continents: Asia, India, Americas, and Europe — current price, change, volume + charts are displayed. The Indexes include MerVal, Bovespa, TSX, AEX, FTSE 100, DAX, CAC 40, NIKKEI, HANG SENG, SHANGHAI, STRAITS, NZX 50, JAKARTA, TSEC, SENSEX and NIFTY. World stock data at your fingertips. The SaneBull Commodities/Futures is an automatically updated widget that also allows you to embed and monitor progress of various items such as energies (Crude and Heating Oil, Natural Gas, and Propane), metals (Alumnium, Gold, Silver, and other), grains (Corn, Oats, Rice, and Soubeans), livestock, and, finally, soft materials (Cocoa, Coffee, Cotton, Lumber, OJ, and Sugar) through the trading day. And a good news is that you does not need to create Your Login ID(User Name and Password), to display or put above Live World Stock/ Commodities/ Future market widget on your Blog, Webpage, Website. The widgets are avilable at sanebull.com The preview or actual running widget of world wide stock market is shown.


Getting Knowledge With The Forex Markets And Trading System


Finding a forex trading system that works will require a little bit of knowledge and first-hand experience with forex markets and trading. Way it works is that traders can use the forex market to buy and sell currency pairs. The profit comes from currency fluctuations that create a difference in the relative values of the currency pair.
The key to it is to know when and where the fluctuations and long-term currency changes will come. For this, forex traders have developed systems that use strategies based on multiple indicators. There is a large range of possibilities to construct or buy a trade system.
The trader first has to decide on which strategy to use. Trading systems have built in strategies that depend on a combination of indicators. It is even possible to build one, and forex trading courses usually teach traders how to do this. But it’s a bit like reinventing the wheel, when one needs to buy a car.
It’s also difficult to point towards a forex trade system that works more efficiently than the rest. There are new ones that pop up in the market every other day. Traders who haven’t used one previously and are having difficulties sorting out the good ones from the rest should visit a few forex review sites.
It’s also a good idea to try out the system first, in case the vendor offers a free trial. If not, the least that can be done is to study all the historical data related to the system. Find out the average pip gain the system can rack up in a week or a month for a specific number of trades.
Before buying into a system, it might be advisable to learn a little more about how the system is built and how it works. Building one from scratch is not strictly necessary in order to know how to use it, but it does help. When one knows how the system in question is able to combine indicators to execute the trading strategy, it makes it easier to extract the most from the system.
Some traders are able to fine tune the entire process so that the system can be automated and is able to enter and exit trades without any supervision. The computer is left on, the system plugs into the trading platform, and will execute trades 24/7. To summarize, before starting to look around for a forex trade system that works, try to find out how these systems work.
By Cedric Welsch

For Info Read:CountingPips

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