Coffee

0
Market Update, 29 Jun 2012

This week saw a reversal of last week's trend, with almost all investment categories showing losses.  Currencies and bonds were all lower, on news of new European bank bailouts and fears that next week will bring further easing from the ECB and Bank of England.  Most stock markets were also lower, with the Japanese Nikkei, up 0.6%, being the exception.

More on Market Update, 29 Jun 2012

0

All investment categories except commodities showed nice gains last week.  Interestingly, the week's biggest winners and losers were both commodities, with coffee rising a stunning 7.5% and cotton dropping 3.6%.  Silver and crude oil both lost ground, down 2.8% and 1.3% respectively, while copper was slightly higher, up 0.7%.

More on Market Update, 22 Jun 2012

0

Last week was excellent for almost all investment categories.  Only the long bonds (TLT) showed a loss, taking a breather after an extended  series of gains that have left them up 7.4% for the last month and almost 31% over the last 12 months.

More on Market Update

0

Priced in Gold reader Shaun C. recently wrote me asking for a chart of investment farmland in gold, and suggesting some sources of data.  This was very intriguing, as I have been considering investments in timberland and farmland for myself.  After a little research, I prepared the following charts, which will be updated quarterly on an Investment Real Estate chart page.  They suggest that farmland is the best place for real estate investment money in the near future, but once the "bottom is in", timberland may be the way to go.

More on Investment Real Estate

With fiat currencies all over the world being manipulated by central banks, prices are being distorted beyond all recognition. Successful investing requires having a good idea what things cost, and what they are really worth – and using the world's oldest and most stable form of money, gold, to compare prices is one way to get that insight. Below you'll find a sample of prices measured in grams or milligrams (1/1000 of a gram) of gold.

More on The Week in Gold – Food Prices

Subscriber Ian Shearer recently wrote to point out that although the site covers the price of Oil, the world's most traded commodity, we're missing the number 2 commodity, coffee! Given the number of espressos we make around here every day, that is an omission that had to be corrected.

More on Coffee Prices