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Gold Hits Record $1,000 an Ounce

Gold Bars

MAE ANDERSON and LAUREN SHEPHERD   03/13/08 03:20 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — Bargain-hunting at the local jewelry store just got harder.

Gold, which has soared to record levels in the past year, hit a new milestone Thursday, rising to $1,000 an ounce for the first time in futures trading _ a boon for investors, but a deterrent to consumers shopping for jewelry.

Michelle Findlay, a manager at a toll operator company in New York, said she has stopped buying pure gold pieces. Her latest buy was a silver bracelet plated in 18-karat gold.

"I noticed lately the price has been going up," she said, while browsing at Gold Panel jewelry store on 34th Street in New York. "I'll wait, definitely, for the prices to go down" before buying another gold item, she said.

The price of gold has jumped nearly 20 percent since the start of the year after rising nearly 32 percent in 2007. The huge advance is mainly the result of a weaker dollar and record-high crude oil prices. The dollar fell below 100 yen Thursday for the first time in 12 years and hit another new low against the euro, while oil traded above $110 a barrel Thursday.

Lower interest rates _ and the prospect of more cuts _ bringing the dollar's value down makes dollar-based commodities like gold cheaper for foreign buyers. The weak currency has also made gold more attractive because the metal is a hedge against inflation.

"Interest rates are low and that doesn't help our dollar," said Scott Meyers, senior trading analyst with Pioneer Futures, a division of MF Global.

After topping $1,001 on the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold for April delivery fell back to settle at $993.80 an ounce on Thursday. Analysts say gold could still go higher, especially if the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates again next week as expected.

When gold becomes more expensive on futures markets, it doesn't immediately translate into higher prices for jewelry. But in the long term, the price tags on gold rings, bracelets and necklaces do go up. Exactly when the increases from this latest jump will show up on price tags depends at least in part on a retailer's size.

Big retailers like Tiffany & Co. and those that sell jewelry to large department stores order products up to a year in advance and keep more in stock. Those stores likely didn't pay as much for the jewelry when they ordered it, so they wouldn't need to raise prices as quickly to offset costs.

Instead, since some of those larger stores are already buying merchandise for the 2008 Christmas holiday season, consumers may see higher prices toward the end of the year.

Tiffany spokesman Mark L. Aaron said that while there is not a direct correlation between the rising price of gold and the cost of its gold jewelry _ the labor that goes into a piece is an important factor _ Tiffany does adjust prices based on the cost of precious metals. If gold keeps rising, a price increase this year would be a "fair assumption," he said.

Independent jewelry stores, meanwhile, order products closer to when they appear on the shelves. Patrick J. Murphy, owner of Murphy Jewelry in Pottsville, Pa., said he doesn't raise the price of gold jewelry he has in stock but he must when he reorders pieces.

For example, an 18-inch gold chain in stock has a retail price of $189.95, but if he reordered the chain at the same length, weight and style, it would be priced at $346.

"That's been our challenge," he said.

When the makers of branded jewelry and accessories raise their prices, he has to pass the increase on to customers. He cited a recent price increase by Rolex as one example.

Patti Warshauer, owner of Main Street Goldworks in Half Moon Bay, Calif., said consumers are buying less, but it's not the price of gold that's getting to them _ it is all the other financial pressures they're contending with.

"Discretionary income is much more affected by the price of other things, gas and things like that," she said. "They're still buying gold if they need it, if it's what they like."

Browsing jewelry stores in New York's diamond district, Kathleen Pierri, from Smithtown, N.Y., said the rising price of gold might make her buy less, but "if you really like it, you'll buy it," she said.

"Jewelry is a feel-good item, you're going to buy it if you need it," Pierri said.

Helen Antalg, a jewelry appraiser from Australia, said she was on watch for a good deal during a vacation in New York. "I'm looking to see if there's anything that catches my eye and at a good price," she said.

"I'm tending to go to the pawnbrokers as opposed to the retail side of things" in order to get better deals, she said, but added that she hasn't changed her jewelry-buying habits due to rising prices.

With prices rising, selling those not-so-beloved Valentine's Day presents or family heirlooms might sound like a good way to make a few extra bucks. Dave Adelman, who owns two pawn shops in Atlanta, said he's seen an increase in the number of people coming in to sell their gold. But he said he can't be sure whether that can be pegged to gold prices rising or other economic factors.

"When they come in, we don't know whether they're doing it based on the gold price or because of need," he said.

Whether consumers are buying gold or selling it, Murphy, a jeweler for 30 years, said he's amazed the price has jumped so high. He remembers when gold was just $35 an ounce.

"I didn't think we would ever be talking about $1,000 an ounce," he said. "It's crazy."

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01:59 PM on 03/15/2008
And the economists cry as they mutter 'I told you so' to a government that doesn't listen...
04:34 PM on 03/14/2008
George's resume for Worst President Ever just keeps getting longer and longer and longer...
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WIpatriot
I've seen enough to make me Progressive
02:53 PM on 03/14/2008
Boom! Where'd it close today??
11:03 AM on 03/14/2008
This headline is technically wrong. In inflation adjusted dollars, gold was worth around $2,000.00 dollars an ounce, back in the 80's.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitytrumpsbull
two 'alves of coconut!
05:50 AM on 03/14/2008
I don't seem to have any of that. I consider chrome vanadium to be of much higher intrinsic value...
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WIpatriot
I've seen enough to make me Progressive
09:31 AM on 03/14/2008
I got that, too, rtb.
12:49 AM on 03/14/2008
Kill a Rockefeller for Christ.
01:11 AM on 03/14/2008
Can you say that here....oh, you did!
11:05 AM on 03/14/2008
Don't forget the Rothchilds, while you're at it.
11:43 PM on 03/13/2008
Your best bet for a better life is in Europe. This country is heading into a 20 year downward spiral. Inflation, devaluation of the $, high unemployment, high violent crime, police state tactics, wage slavery, wars abroad, and collapsed healthcare.

The middle and lower classes have only one hope, revolution.

1776
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vippy
Carpe Diem!
08:19 AM on 03/14/2008
Sadly, Europe is not doing too much better. The US Influence has them on a downward trend too.
Their malls are empty it is scary. I guess that is the global economy. We will all see that the
rich have figured out the global market to their advantage and have it all under control now.
We are lucky if it does not get much worse. But one has to blame the people for they are so stupid to vote for the same crooks and thieves and we do so again. Kucinich was about change but
people want glitz and glamour and again we are stuck with the same old mess.
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WIpatriot
I've seen enough to make me Progressive
09:32 AM on 03/14/2008
SSDD.
02:06 PM on 03/15/2008
US influence is what's hurting European economy? I'll call BS on that. Their economy has been hurting itself for most of the last century. Two World Wars and no effective backing for money has created its own instabilities that the United States had nothing to do with. Mass immigration is deteriorating the middle classes in Western European countries in the same way mass illegal immigration is in the United States, only the effects are exaggerated in the more densely-populated European nations.

Your "guess" is correct, though. This is a global economic problem that banks are the root of. Given this situation occuring with China and Russia posturing to the Western World, and a constant flow of idiots into American and British politics (let's face it, both of these nations dominate Western political structure), it's hard to see a nicer outcome than another large-scale war in the near future, possibly within our own lifetimes.
11:26 PM on 03/13/2008
The price of gold is not going up. The value of your money denominated in dollars is going down. Therefore, it takes more of them to buy that ounce of gold.

The value of your money denominated in dollars is going down due to the policies of the Bush administration and those allied with them. It is in their interest, as it were.

The inflation process that is happening is nothing more than a very clever way to embezzle the cash and coin from your pockets, purses, and strongboxes.
11:24 PM on 03/13/2008
It depend on what sector of the economy a store serves. I talked to the manager of a high-end jewelry store in Carmel by the Sea several weeks ago and the slump hasn't reached them yet.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
themodernleader
09:49 PM on 03/13/2008
The truth is above everything. The more earnestly an organization or Country strives to discern the actual state of reality, the more civilized is that organization or country. When an organization or country must resort to censorship and forms of deception to disguise or hide the true nature of conditions, that organization or country is in for big trouble.
When does anybody in authority utter a word of the causes and effects of the rise of commodities, including gold, and the fall of the dollar? Silence is an indicator of censorship, whether self imposed or exerted from sources of power. Either way it is sabotaging our ability to act upon those issues that are destroying our society from within.
05:43 PM on 03/13/2008
NEWS-BREAK! Fed's Green ink hits 1k/barrel!!!! just kidding!
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speakingtruth2power
Not motivated by fear & loathing
05:09 PM on 03/13/2008
This is great news for me. With the economy in shambles my retail business is dying.

It looks like I'll have to go get that 2 or 3 hundred pounds of gold I own in SW Oregon.

the only problem with that plan is that it will take 1,000,000 man hours to extract it all.
05:15 PM on 03/13/2008
It is safer in the ground ...

Mine as much as you need, the rest is in the bank ... of the river !
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speakingtruth2power
Not motivated by fear & loathing
05:16 PM on 03/13/2008
Um, that means that at best I'll be making $4.80 an hour

and considering inflation, I better come up with plan C!
05:25 PM on 03/13/2008
As gold goes higher your wages go up. The way things are going you could sell claims and take half of the bounty ... at the rate this economy is plunging people will be lining up. Make sure to have some muscle.
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05:05 PM on 03/13/2008
When Rommel (The desert fox) was trying his best to take over North Africa for oil, in the '40s, his BOSS was having his other followers selvedge gold from the very mouths of executed non-followers.

Those who feel important because they have hoards of gold or oil at the expense of others. I hope you enjoy it.
05:14 PM on 03/13/2008
How true ... without civil society, markets and therefore modern economies do not exist.

In 1933 the USA outlawed the holding of all non numismatic gold... there will be a bigger outcry this time around ...
04:57 PM on 03/13/2008
The Peak Oil Crisis: The Last Spiral?

http://www.fcnp.com/news/the_peak_oil_crisis_the_last_spiral_20080312.html

The most unbelievable fact :

As highly dependent as we are on oil we have no idea what the 'real' reserves are for most of the OPEC countries ... All the state owned oil companies refuse to give any figures , while they show reserves going up after years of heavy depletion.
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WIpatriot
I've seen enough to make me Progressive
04:23 PM on 03/13/2008
W00T!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrcontinental
04:30 PM on 03/13/2008
They central banks cannot kill the monster partiot. They threw 200 billion at it and still nada. Now you have maniacs talking $2000.
04:39 PM on 03/13/2008
There is no reason gold won't hit $2,000 ...

The privately owned and operated Fed is going to print as much money as it needs to bail out its owners and members.

This will all fail as oil spikes and undercuts any economic rebound while casting doubts about the ability of corporate and private debt to be repaid undermining the whole debt market and sending the economy into yet another tailspin of insolvency.
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WIpatriot
I've seen enough to make me Progressive
04:57 PM on 03/13/2008
You know it, MrC. They got nothing. Watch silver start to inch up after gold holds the $1K line. I see gold nearing $1300 by the end of the year, and silver closing in on $30.

But, I could be wrong. Dan will tell you.