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political-depth · 5 months
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The Factors Driving the Gold Price to New Highs: An Analysis
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digitalguap · 9 months
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Unveiling the Truth Behind Silver in 2023: A Comprehensive Analysis
Welcome to our blog post where we delve deep into the fascinating world of silver and reveal the truth behind its captivating allure in the year 2023. In this comprehensive analysis, we will explore the various facets of this precious metal, from its historical significance to its current market trends. Join us as we unravel the mysteries of silver and gain valuable insights into this remarkable…
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livemintvideos · 1 year
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Gold price rising, Should you buy? | Gold Rates 2023 | Mint Primer | Mint
Gold prices on 4th January 2022 extended New Year's gains by edging closer to all-time highs. On MCX, gold futures were up 0.7% to ₹55,975 per 10 gram while silver rose 0.3% to ₹70,135 per kg. In August 2020, gold had hit highs of ₹56,200 amid the covid crisis. What is the cause for the increase in this price, and what are the levels of support and resistance? Let us investigate all of this in this video
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goldsilverreports · 2 years
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Spot Silver Price Forecast: Buy on Dips, Healthy Resistance $20.20
Spot Silver Price Forecast: Buy on Dips, Healthy Resistance $20.20
Spot Silver Price Forecast: XAG/USD reverses its early lost ground and moves back to the $19.80 area during the first half of the European session on Tuesday. The white metal is currently placed just below a nearly four-week high touched the previous day and seems poised to prolong its recent recovery from the $17.55 area, or over a two-year low. (more…)
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mahendraprophecy77 · 2 months
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pricevisionai · 1 year
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Commodity Trading: Introduction to AI-based Price Forecasting Tool
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A commodity is a freely exchangeable good or material with a similar worth to a piece of merchandise. Agricultural goods, energy, metal, and animals and meat are the four main groups. Commencing thousands of years ago, the pricing and selling of commodities have always been crucial to the establishment of numerous empires, both economically and politically. Commodity markets have expanded over the years in tandem with ongoing product development.
Commodity exchanges' primary goal is to provide producers with a marketplace where they may sell their goods to consumers who are in need of them. However, it is associated with extremely high volatility brought on by speculators who buy assets for a brief period of time with the hope of making money from changes in price. As a result, they might never handle the successful service of the commodity.
Artificial intelligence forecasting and planning is a discipline that enables unsupervised, scientific future projections. Time series data is used by AI planning systems to forecast future trends in a variety of sectors, including sales, health, financial services, and production. With AI forecasting, scheduling and planning issues can be easily anticipated.
Why are predicting commodity prices of interest to people?
Since the earliest days of human civilization, the pricing and trade of commodities (i.e., things and raw materials that may be purchased and sold) have attracted a significant deal of attention. A civilization's growth was closely tied to its capacity to generate valuable things that could be exchanged for other goods or commodities that it lacked but which were essential to its prosperity. The trading and pricing of commodities have grown increasingly complex over time, yet the underlying rules that govern how they are handled now are the same as those that applied a few thousand years ago.
Numerous applications of commodities can be seen in our daily lives. With the ongoing evolution of products, the uses and needs for commodities have changed over time. One of the most ancient and commonly used materials is copper, which has been used for thousands of years to make tools and weapons for hunting and farming, among other things. Due to its excellent conductivity, copper is now mostly used in electrical equipment, particularly electrical wire.
Individuals are interested in valuing and selling commodities for a variety of reasons. The producers and purchasers of real physical commodities make up a sizable fraction of those involved in trading operations related to commodities. In this instance, different forms of future contracts are used for hedging reasons to carry out the purchasing and selling activities. Speculators are a diverse group of individuals that are engaged in commodity trading. Here, speculative traders engage in financial operations with the intention of making money by profiting from changes in commodity prices. Speculators have zero interest in purchasing the actual commodity.
AI for anticipating time series
Machine Learning (ML) or artificial intelligence more generally, is the research of algorithms that can generate results that depend heavily on the input data given. Contrary to this, traditional algorithms usually do a particular task by carefully following a set of clear, predetermined instructions. Thanks to improvements in processing power as well as an abundance of data that can be used to "train" these kinds of algorithms, algorithms for machine learning have grown in popularity and have been widely implemented in recent years.
Machine learning includes a wide range of techniques, which are typically divided into three groups based on the kind of problem they try to answer and the kind of data they have access to. Supervised Learning, Unsupervised Learning, and Reinforcement Learning are the three categories of algorithms. Algorithms for Supervised Learning, which may be directly applied to time-series data, are mostly used in price forecasting.
There is a lot of research being done to increase the dependability of time series information for applications other than just finance. Examples of these applications include forecasting consumer demand or product usage, figuring out how traffic will change in a certain location, or even anticipating how patients will react to certain medications over a specified time frame.
What methods does AI planning use?
In terms of models and techniques for various sorts of AI forecasting and planning in business, three approaches now dominate the field of artificial intelligence:
Networks using Bayes
One of the earliest types of AI, Bayesian Networks, scale exceptionally well for many different types of challenges and are possibly the most extensively used and significant AI technologies. They effectively carry out a wide range of highly diversified AI activities, including order planning features in slashing POS systems, spam filters that secure your email inbox, and military equipment used to detect threats to national security.
Adaptive Algorithms
Despite having a long history of inspiration, optimization techniques represent one of the most recent developments in artificial intelligence. Mimicking the natural processes of recombination, mutation, and performance comparison to identify the most suited to undergo further evolution. Due to the fact that they are a better fit for engineering issues where the circumstances are complex but extremely well understood, optimization algorithms are less frequently used in AI planning. Nevertheless, they are nevertheless quite helpful in various forecasting and planning activities since they are creative and new optimizers that may come up with answers that people usually wouldn't think of.
In-depth Learning
Despite being the most computationally intensive AI discipline, it is also the youngest. What it misses in the sophistication of age, it frequently more often than compensates for through its striking resemblance to the mechanisms found in the genuine, innate intellect of humans. Unstructured data is taken and put through a network of specialized algorithms, each of which focuses on a specific portion of the data before merging their individual characterizations to analyze the entire data set. This algorithm is ideally suited to making decisions on tasks that cannot be easily characterized by basic rules since each component gradually improves its task by "learning" with each run. This can be a crucial asset when forecasting or making plans based on preferences or human behavior.
How are planning and forecasting using AI used in various industries?
Every day, a wide variety of businesses employ AI forecasting and planning to create firm scientific predictions for their operations.
Several instances include:
To balance supplies & sales in a way that maximizes profits, the whole global production supply chain relies on AI forecasting and planning. Even the smallest manufacturing requires considerably more suppliers than a human mind can handle on its own, much less perfectly optimize. None of the contemporary huge industrial corporations could even exist, much less rule their sector, without AI forecasting and planning.
Since causal inference is not well-suited for predicting novel events but accurate planning is still crucial to success, high-tech industries rely on AI forecasting and forecasting when creating cutting-edge products.
In order to overcome the prejudices of doctors, scientists, and support workers and better comprehend sickness and modify therapies using data-driven approaches, healthcare is quickly adopting AI forecasting and planning.
Forecasting the right time to switch inventory between summer to fall is crucial in a worldwide retail management system. However, if it isn't taken into account independently for each hemisphere when the temperatures rise, Australia will receive shipments of bulky winter clothing.
How is AI planning crucial to your company?
With considerably fewer errors and consistently better results than data scientists and specialists, AI forecasting and planning employs algorithms to make forecasts and forecast tendencies without the use of human judgment. Studies that compared expert human forecasts with predictions made by artificial intelligence almost always showed the former to be superior. Although AI and algorithms won't ever completely replace human intelligence, data analysts and forecasters will always find their capacity to evaluate data to be useful tools.
Businesses are aware of many parts of specific data, such as the typical length of customer waits or the number of products that can be produced in a day, but due to the millions of bytes that are collected every day and the fact that a large portion of that data is unstructured, it is essentially impossible for a person to analyze data as quickly and precisely as AI.
Insufficient AI prediction in your company could result in significant efficiency losses. According to studies, the majority of corporate planners believe artificial intelligence will replace traditional methods of demand forecasting in the future.
Greater portions of planning and forecasting will need to be done by AI as the world becomes more complicated since the human mind cannot keep up with that degree of complexity. Until it completely vanishes, such data prediction work produced without AI is becoming increasingly unusual. A company will benefit more from implementing this technology as soon as possible.
What qualities should AI forecasting tools have?
Artificial intelligence prediction systems must clearly and simply transform unprocessed data into scientific projections. They should take a two-pronged approach, using historical data to evaluate forecasting models and predict future trends in addition to your data.
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ankitjainofficial · 1 year
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Silver Price Forecast for Next Week
In this video, we are sharing SilverRate XAGUSDWeeklyAnalysis Prediction for 15-19 Jan 2023, Please watch the full video and share it with your friends also.
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darsynia · 1 year
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I Know No Other Way Than This | Ch2
(Bruce Banner/OFC, Tony Stark & Bruce Banner Friendship, post-Avengers 1 Soulmate AU multichapter)
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MCU Masterlist | Tony Stark Masterlist | Prev | Next
Summary: Bruce tried to forget he had soulmate words entirely, but on the day of the Chitauri attack, he returned from his stint as the Hulk to find that his black words had turned silver. His soulmate must have watched him shift from the Other Guy into himself and said them while he was unconscious...
Length: 2,016
Tags: @starryeyes2000 @arrthurpendragon @ronearoundblindly @themaradaniels
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Chapter Two: No Second Guessing
The next day, Bruce was too busy to hassle Tony over something he would rather just forget about entirely. The fact that the wormhole had been situated over the tower meant that Tony had a lot of data to go through, and he’d invited Bruce to stay and help. It was a lot better prospect than scrounging for a living in far-flung countries, as he’d been doing. Bruce did have one condition, though. He made Stark promise to build a containment solution for the Hulk as part of the rebuilding process.
Though Stark Industries was headquartered in California, Tony’s tower was a home away from home for Stark, and he planned to stick around for a few weeks to oversee his charity’s work in helping New York City recover from the attack. All of the Avengers had been given apartments to use, though Bruce was pretty sure Steve Rogers had already found a place in Brooklyn, and both Clint and Natasha seemed like they were staying only temporarily.
The soulmate thing was setting off some concern meters for him, though. Of all of the places to have come across her, and at all of the times, this was the worst. Bruce could almost taste stability in the air, something he’d despaired of ever even detecting again. He ought to take her very existence here as a cue to leave. If she was dressed in scrubs, that meant she wasn’t a tourist. She likely lived somewhere nearby, probably worked at a local hospital, and had almost certainly rushed to help when things turned bizarre and dangerous outside.
The only good thing about the situation was it couldn’t be argued that the woman had any intention of meeting him while he was conscious. It didn’t even hurt, her fear, as it might have as little as five years ago. She was wise, his soulmate.
Bruce left Tony’s tainted tablet where he’d found it on the kitchen counter. Giving it back would broach a subject he intended to avoid indefinitely.
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“Tony, what’s the login here?” Bruce asked. The past two days had been spent on the roof looking over what remained of the apparatus Selvig had built to create the wormhole. Rain was in the forecast that day, though, so they were down in the lab Stark had been populating with equipment in advance of finishing up on the roof.
“Texted it to you,” Tony said, walking past with a large plank of wood. He was wearing gloves, but the edge of the thing was resting on his bare lower arm. It was Splinter City, waiting to happen. Bruce wondered exactly how oblivious to possible danger a person had to be to work with Bruce Banner, lab experiment gone wrong, and still not wear proper PPE.
“I left my phone in the apartment. Can’t you just set it to the same password as the laptop we were already using? I have that one memorized already.”
Stark stopped, letting the wood slide down onto the floor. Bruce winced. “No! You shouldn’t ever use the same password twice, Big Green. That would just be irresponsible.” He rolled his eyes and hefted the wood back up, heading over to the back wall where he’d set up a stack of coffee tins and a plastic bin at equal heights. Tony set down the wood on it, whipped a level out of his back pocket, and made a self-satisfied noise.
Bruce thought he had once seen those same empty tins going for a couple of hundred each on Ebay. They were from some rare, exclusive brand that weren’t even sold at a flat price, but auctioned off, tin by tin, brand new. Did Tony even know they were anything other than extra fodder for his MacGuyverish approach to lab design?
“I’ll be back, then,” Bruce said.
“Okay, fine. But I didn’t finish your playroom yet, so you’re not allowed to smash me.”
“Tony, I rarely know what you’re talking about,” Bruce said.
“I’ll take that as a compliment. So here’s the thing: I have access to probably some things that I shouldn’t, thanks to some tech connections.” He sat down beside the computer Bruce was trying to access. “One of those things is search data. I share it with SHIELD when they play nice. I’ve got not just what’s searched, but where and by whom, if that information is available. There’s a difference between someone searching for ‘Banner, gamma, weakness’ when it’s somewhere in Sokovia two weeks ago versus a person at a public library in NYC searching ‘Hulk, human, transform’ just yesterday, right? And there was.”
“What does this have to do with the password to access the computer you’re leaning on, Tony?” Bruce asked, hoping he sounded patient enough to avoid a ‘calm down’ jibe.
“Footage of your girl,” Tony said, grinning. “I think she knows who you are, now. And I know her name, thanks to the library system logging who uses their card for public computer access.”
Bruce immediately pictured the black-haired woman from the tablet video and wondered if this one showed her face. Then, sanity returned. Nothing good could come of what Stark was doing.
“That’s got to be multiple privacy violations, Tony! Honestly, can’t you leave well enough alone? She probably wants to know how to avoid me, and for good reason.”
“If you both play hard to get, neither of you will ‘get,’ you know that, right?” Tony said, hopping down from the table with a petulant frown.
“That’s exactly the point, yes,” Bruce said, taking off his glasses and pinching the bridge of his nose.
“Well, how about this, then. You want to avoid her so much, you should know what she looks like, yes? Maybe know her name? Who knows, you might want to hire a medical team to run tests in the basement at some point, and you wouldn’t want to accidentally hire your soulmate, how embarrassing , right?”
“Funny.” It was a known secret that, thanks to their nondescript soulmate words, neither Tony nor Pepper had known they were the ones who had triggered them for each other. They’d both spent time and resources trying to track down the person who’d said their words. The realization had taken years.
“Bruce. Brucey Bear. Pistachio Studmuffin. Take it from me, okay? Resisting soulmates is resisting the inevitable. Pep and I took ‘let’s pretend this is a platonic match’ thing for a ride for a really, really long time, and all it did was bring us back to the station. You should trust the expert on this,” Tony said, dropping into the desk chair and tapping out a complicated password like it was as easy to remember as ‘password12345.’ He leaned back and smiled at Bruce. “Don’t make me have to kidnap you in a cave for three months to get you to see the light.”
“Yeah, I don’t think that would go well for you or the cave,” Bruce said. “I can assume you’ve booby trapped this with another video, then?”
“Facial shot, yes. Boobs? Sorry, the monitor was in the way.”
Bruce ignored the childish comment, even if it was a bit witty. “If I watch this will you stop?”
“Oh, goodness no.”
Just like before, the video started right away. In an overhead view, a black-haired woman walked into the entryway for what Bruce assumed was a library. Her shoulder-length hair was held back from her forehead with a cloth headband, and she was wearing a purple shirt similar in color to one of Bruce’s favorites. He shot a sidelong look at Tony, wondering if he knew about the shirt. He’d probably never hear the end of it, if his friend figured that out.
Then, something occurred to him.
“I thought you said you had search data?” Bruce asked. He was starting to question how cavalierly his friend was taking this project of his.
“I cross-referenced that with the surveillance. Come on, it’s not like it was hard.”
The view changed to the side, watching her walk through a large room to a bank of computers at the back. Again the view changed to a quite close perspective, slanted across her face as she sat down at the nearest computer.
“Lucked out, there. That camera is static,” Tony said.
Bruce should have had the strength to look away, but he didn’t. His soulmate had a heart-shaped face with a small nose that turned up a little at the tip. Her eyes were blue, so clear and rich in hue that even the surveillance camera caught the color. She was pretty. Maybe even more than pretty.
The sight of her struck him like a blow. Even in the year 2012, soulmates were considered the most important factor in relationships. Maybe people who didn’t believe in them weren’t considered mentally ill anymore by the more conservative, family-oriented groups in the world, but there were rude names for women with black soulmate words who were out looking for a long-term, non-bonded relationship. That’s the life the woman he was looking at had in store for herself. Just by virtue of being magically, painfully linked to him.
“Turn it off,” Bruce said darkly. “I have work to do on this thing.”
“But you’ll miss-- here, look,” Tony said.
In a window at the right hand corner of the full-screen video, a view of the computer his soulmate was using popped up.
“How--” Bruce started.
“It’s like you don’t know me at all,” Tony scoffed.
She scanned her library card and a box popped up. Inside was a name. Cicely Besnard.
Knowing her name made the situation more real for Bruce, in a way that having silver-tinted words didn’t. Until now, the black-haired healthcare worker was only an archetype, a helpful person whose exact shape and name were undefined. She was a real person now, no longer an abstraction he could pretend wasn’t relevant. 
As Bruce watched, she tapped ‘confirm’ on her name and address (he deliberately didn’t look, but assumed Tony already had it written down somewhere) and brought up a browser window. Instead of typing immediately, though, she stopped, looking up as if trying to remember something.
Multiple emotions crossed her face. Her eyes widened, lips pressing together before they curled up in the sort of smile that implied the person had a secret. Bruce supposed she did. After a few seconds, she mouthed something he couldn’t decipher from lip reading and started typing.
The computer view showed the words. ‘Hulk, human form, transform.’ The results appeared, showing a few YouTube videos of people in green makeup using their graphics skills to pretend they were transforming from the Hulk into themselves. The top non-video result, though, was his Wikipedia entry, with his name.
This time Bruce understood what Cicely Besnard said, even without hearing her words, because it was his name.
“See? Interest, not fear,” Tony said.
“I’m not afraid either, Tony, but I have no intention of doing anything about this,” Bruce said, gesturing at the screen. “In fact, I suspect this woman looked these things up at a public library because she doesn’t want the results on her home computer or her phone. This is proof that she’s the kind of smart, concerned person I thought she was. She’s keeping this soulmate thing away from her home and work life, just like I’m going to.”
Bruce let himself look one more time at the blue-eyed, black-haired woman that fate had designated as his soulmate. “I’m sorry, Cicely,” he said, and closed the program using Force Quit.
“What home life?” Tony muttered. “You know, standing on some kind of self-hating principle like this doesn’t do anyone any good.” Tony told him.
He did actually know that, but Tony hopefully would never know what it was like to love someone as much as he’d loved Betty, only to discover that it was his actions that had put her in the hospital. The most generous, caring thing he could do for his soulmate would be to stay far, far away from her.
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Next chapter, some of the nosy stuff Tony's been doing reveals that Bruce's soulmate Cicely may need their help.
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mariacallous · 9 months
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In a financialized world, can currencies shape geopolitics? Hardly a week passes without a pundit forecasting the future of the global order on the basis of subtle changes in the stock of currencies and gold stashed in central banks—as if a few more Chinese renminbi in South America, a little more gold in Asia, or the price of a virtual currency anticipates a world that is more democratic, autocratic, or libertarian. The same goes for broader trends, such as the growing share of Chinese renminbi and other forms of “autocratic money” in commodities trade, sovereign lending, and other global markets historically dominated by the West.
This punditry is not unwarranted. And yet punditry inevitably misses some crucial context—context that only fine-grained case studies can provide. Societies have always created currencies with a political function in mind—but the qualities of a currency, in turn, can also shape politics, both domestic and global. Ekaterina Pravilova’s The Ruble: A Political History persuasively offers Russia’s currency as a case study in the entanglement of money and power, and in so doing, encourages us to understand what catalyzes these global trends. A 200-year “biography of a currency,” the book positions the ruble as both an important part of imperial organization and an unexpected anchor of Soviet influence. The ruble also emerges, amid political and financial crisis, as a potential instrument of Russian democracy—yet its history ultimately demonstrates how a currency can become a primary tool for creating and maintaining an autocracy.
And while Russia’s singular monetary history has earned its economy a “backward” reputation, better known for profiting from geopolitical chaos than sound policy, it has also made the country a pioneer, leading it in a direction that many autocracies are headed today—namely, toward greater isolation from the West’s financial ecosystem. Whether that will also involve greater financial cooperation with other autocratic powers, including, as many anticipate, increased denomination of its trade and investment in China’s renminbi, depends on the Russian government’s conception of its own currency—and the related strength of its own autocracy.
When Russia first issued paper rubles in 1769, nobody considered these assignats to be real money. Catherine the Great implored Russians to trust the state, and so made these bills exchangeable for copper and silver coins stored in Assignat Banks. Before long, the expanding Russian empire demanded more paper, and Catherine supplied it in excess of the state’s stock of metal—that is to say, on credit. She vouched for assignats even amid inflation, and with no independent central bank to hold her accountable, their value depended on the sanctity of the sovereign’s word.
Assignats thus became Russia’s initial form of autocratic money, projecting Catherine’s absolute authority. At a time when the rest of Europe was demanding monetary accountability, Russia backed its currency’s value with its monarch’s “sublime power” rather than any material collateral. When Nicholas I reformed the system in 1839, replacing assignats with silver-based bills backed by the “entire patrimony of the state” rather than a mere personal promise, he intended to maintain this autocracy; indeed, the state’s wealth was not nearly sufficient to provide this support, given that it only had sufficient silver to back up one-sixth of the rubles in circulation. There was no way to actually redeem the entire nation’s wealth under these conditions: Unlike the gold reserves in Europe’s central banks, which were independent from their state’s treasury, Russia’s bullion reserve—representing the bulk of its tangible wealth—was the only one in Europe directly controlled by the state.
Liberal economists and intellectuals in Russia took issue with this lack of monetary independence. Inevitably, a monarch succumbs to the temptation to generate revenue by printing more money, leading to inflation. If money truly represented the nation’s wealth, as Nicholas I claimed, then the tsar should be prevented from destroying that wealth. Since the people bore the cost of the tsar’s excessive money printing, and they lacked political representation, the “people’s ruble” should be convertible—to gold, silver, or something else—and the state should not issue money beyond this wealth.
Russian nationalists countered that convertibility impeded the tsar’s ability to finance wars that would expand the empire and defend Christian Orthodoxy. Where else would Russia get money? If the tsar couldn’t print it as needed, he’d have to take it from foreigners in exchange for Russia’s sovereignty. Having observed that the French monarchy’s large borrowing required it to cede power to its creditors, Russia avoided borrowing in any significant way until its 1877 war with Turkey. To some, its fiscal prudence had been a virtue—even leading U.S. diplomat Alexander Hill Everett to imagine a world in which Europe was united under Russia’s military, the only one not funded by public debt.
But Sergei Witte, a savvy bureaucrat who defined Russia’s monetary thinking in the 1890s, and the central figure in Pravilova’s history, agreed that backing the currency with gold was a good idea—but not because a gold standard forced the state to commit to rational monetary policy and limited its demands for cash, as liberals hoped. Rather, Witte believed that adopting gold would become a source of stability for the ruble and national pride for Russia; a necessary reassurance to foreign creditors; and, finally, admission to the club of economically civilized nations. Russia’s conservative faction thus spun the liberal idea of convertibility into the rhetoric of the monarchy.
In 1897, Russia, Europe’s only gold-producing country and claiming its largest bullion reserve, became the last major economy to join the gold standard. Witte’s gold-backed paper and small silver change was immediately unpopular among peasants, urbanites, and indigenous Russians alike. Billed as a necessary step toward modernity, Witte’s reform struck many as a return to a medieval economy. Some asked why a relatively poor European country was stockpiling gold, rather than spending it on, say, public education. “All of thinking Russia was against” it, Witte admitted, to the point that journalists in France, the country whose monetary thinking so influenced his plan, called it a “monetary coup d’état.”
Though a coup captures the reform’s dubious origins—Witte’s backroom dealings, a secret decree, and few administrative controls—this isn’t totally accurate. Russia managed to avoid the political revolutions that had forced many of Europe’s other gold standards. And as unpopular as the reform was with Russian citizens, it did please one important faction. According to one source, foreigners invested more capital in Russia in the year after Witte’s reform than the prior 40 years combined.
Although Russia is perhaps better known for defaulting on its debt—most notably in 1918 and 1998—it was the state’s devotion to servicing its foreign loans, even at the expense of its domestic obligations, that would trigger the country’s most important political revolutions.
As its empire expanded, Russia became one of the most aggressive participants in capital markets, and Witte’s gold standard locked it in a vicious cycle: The bigger it became, the more money it needed to print or borrow, and the more gold it needed to hold in reserve. But the more it held in reserve, the less it had to spend, so the more it needed to print or borrow. Soon, Russia was borrowing gold abroad in order to sustain the rate at which it was printing gold-backed rubles, overlooking the fact that this cross-collateralized its bullion reserve, exposing it to both foreign and domestic creditors.
Most countries would simply suspend gold convertibility during war and issue fiat currency instead, but the size of Russia’s foreign debts prevented this. Revolutionaries, fed up with the state’s unaccountable, debt-funded budgets, called for an end to foreign borrowing at the expense of the Russian people. Hoping to expose the state’s insolvency, they circulated a manifesto, partly drafted by Leon Trotsky, that started a run on the regime. Depositors emptied their savings accounts, refusing to pay taxes or accept rubles for payment, while panicked creditors tried to offload Russian bonds.
The regime survived this financial crisis, but the revolution’s calls for political reform had some success: In 1905, Russia transitioned to a constitutional monarchy, and a year later elected its first legislature. However, the State Duma was given little power to separate the State Bank from the treasury, and the state maintained total monetary control.
Whereas, in the eyes of liberals and revolutionaries, the gold standard in other European countries signified true constitutionalism—political representation that demanded transparent financial policy—Russia’s gold policy was supposed to compensate for its lack of such assurances. But for Russians, the government’s rationale was a joke that, according to Vladimir Lenin, then an exiled Bolshevik leader, “made the entire world laugh.”
The viability of this unusual system was tested yet again during the First World War, which caused a race for gold that saw Russia pay unprecedented prices for it on foreign markets and led the state to call in all the country’s gold except the holiest Orthodox relics. “You’ve got a lot of gold trinkets,” read one official’s announcement, and “it is your patriotic duty to deliver all this useless luxury to the state.” Many of these trinkets were worth more in their original form than melted into gold bars. Some Russians, fearing seizure, melted their stashes of gold coins, the easier to carry them out of the country as newly crafted necklaces. The scheme netted only 655,000 rubles—enough for 13 days of wartime expenses.
World War I proved too much for Russia’s financial policy, and in 1914 it abandoned the gold standard. An income tax (which was transparent) and government bonds (which were voluntary) had replaced convertibility as the democratic mechanisms akin to a stake in Russia’s government, but they provided neither sufficient revenue to the state, nor adequate representation to the people.
Thus, even the Bolsheviks, so eager to eliminate money on the way to socialism, found that they still needed it, and generated revenue by printing rubles beyond anything seen by their imperial predecessors. (The Bolshevik-created bureaucracy would soon employ three times as many officials as the imperial government.) Financing the government through monetary emission was not the Bolsheviks’ original plan, but central planning required coordination, and money helped organize resources. Soon, revolutionaries were simply trying to manage the ruble’s depreciation and maintain the state’s monopoly on money-printing.
Reflecting on these mishaps, the early Soviet state consulted a group of experts in 1920 to consider whether money should, in fact, exist under socialism. One participant, Vladimir Zheleznov, argued that money was the only language expressing social needs. To be sure, it represents a “compromise between personal freedom and social organization,” but Zheleznov suggested that each person has an economic interest—even under socialism—and this interest is expressed in money.
Zheleznov’s view, which drew on the Aristotelian concept of money (nomisma) as a tool of reciprocity among citizens, informed the Soviet Union’s New Economic Policy (NEP) in 1921. The NEP allowed citizens to keep money in any amount, replaced Soviet food requisitions with proper transparent taxes, and replaced the imperial ruble with a Soviet one. But just as ancient Greek currency became, over time, a tool for imperialism, the Soviet reform returned Russia to Witte’s imperial standard.
Lenin, like Witte, thought gold might attract foreign investors the way it had after 1897. And so the new treasury notes, which were backed by the state’s credit just like Nicholas I’s bills, circulated alongside bank notes ostensibly backed 25 percent by gold. But with its gold reserves impaired by the war effort (and its Gulag camps yet to properly restart gold mining in Siberia), Lenin’s forces had to raid the last stash of gold in the country, the coffers of the Orthodox church.
But even as it stockpiled gold, the state never actually sanctioned the ruble’s convertibility as promised. “If a certain Ivanov comes to [the] State Bank” demanding gold, said the people’s commissar of finance, then they would assume Ivanov is a counterrevolutionary hoping to buy “a little gold mug with the tsar’s portrait.” With so many unexchangeable rubles circulating, Russians once again saw convertibility as “a panacea for our economy,” but subsequent reforms in 1947 and 1961 did not grant monetary independence—according to Pravilova, they merely reaffirmed the political role of Soviet money as “an instrument of governance, propaganda, and Cold War diplomacy.”
Both imperial and Soviet governments meddled with the monetary system without changing the institutional and political foundations of Russia’s economy, nor fixing its fundamental problem: a lack of productivity. It is no wonder, then, that former Soviet states celebrated their independence by issuing their own national currencies.
The Central Bank of Russia finally achieved independence in the early 1990s. But the ruble, which was never fully convertible under a pseudo-gold standard, has become a favored tool of Russia’s current leadership for shifting the burden of war and sanctions to the Russian people.
Reflecting on Putin’s reign, Pravilova writes that the ruble has absorbed the cost of attacks on Chechnya, Georgia, Crimea, and Ukraine. Putin’s second invasion of Ukraine in 2022 rendered the ruble mostly inconvertible to Western currencies and limited Russia’s access to global finance. Once more, the ruble became a symbol of autocracy and autarky to the West, while its exchange rate prophesied Russia’s fate in its latest war. It is why Putin rushed to stabilize the ruble after the invasion, and why the Biden administration hastened to declare its sanctions on Russia had reduced the currency to “rubble.”
Several scholars have argued that money can play a role in creating and shaping democracy, and Pravilova demonstrates that powerful rulers can use the very same instruments to control the public and consolidate their autocracy. While most of Europe was democratizing and developing the modern toolkit of central banking, Russia managed domestic crisis by changing the ruble’s form, value, or metallic backing, often in lieu of political reform. By designing a currency that maintains autocracy, true monetary accountability will remain beyond the public’s reach.
Before Russia’s gold standard was co-opted by monarchists for the sake of securing foreign credit, it was a way for liberals to demand government accountability under a regime that did not offer true political representation for its people. This concept was always undermined by a lack of monetary independence in Russia, which became liberals’ second major demand for accountability. The ruble remains one of many marginal currencies—occasionally sanctioned, constantly fluctuating, and rarely circulating outside trade alliances—issued by autocrats hoping to retain the centrality of the state over the monetary system.
From Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s historically inflationary policies to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s unilateral seizure of rupees, Putin is far from the only ruler forcing the costs of his regime on citizens who lack proper representation. Some of these rulers have sought new means to defend their autocratic model and challenge the U.S. dollar network with monetary symbols of their authority.
Today, autocratic countries make more than half of the world’s gold purchases, some of which insulate their economies from Western meddling or back trade-oriented cryptocurrencies. Broader currency alliances aim to directly challenge the dollar standard, but attempts in Latin America and other emerging markets have crumbled for lack of a stable keystone currency.
China’s renminbi may be the politically aligned alternative they seek. About 2.5 percent of foreign official currency reserves are held in renminbi, with almost one-third of that amount owned by Russia alone. Chinese President Xi Jinping’s capital controls make the renminbi’s convertibility into Western currencies doubtful, limiting its utility for now. A larger alliance of smaller currencies allays some of that concern, but it also means that, as in imperial Russia, it is the autocrat’s promise that backs up the renminbi, and financial stability depends on his goodwill.
Faced with this prospect, The Ruble contributes to a recently reinvigorated debate: What is money? Is it a mechanism of exchange and credit, or a tool of governance and coercion? A check on autocratic power or a symbol of that power? The ruble’s role at the center of crisis and reform shows that it could be all these things, or none of them. After all, currency not only reflects the political order—it actively shapes it.
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zvaigzdelasas · 2 years
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The Cordero project in Chihuahua state can be a Tier 1 silver producer, says [Canadian-Owned] Discovery. Indicators point to a mine that will be among the world’s top five producers at a rate of 26 million oz. of silver-equivalent annually from the world’s third largest silver deposit.[...]
The price of the metal is going up as its importance for a green future increases. It has growing use in solar panels and electric vehicles as well as jewelry, coins and bars.
“Forecast silver demand is expected to surge thanks to its use in solar technology,” said vice-president Forbes Gemmell. “Cordero is emerging as one of the world’s top three primary silver mines at a time when this global shift to green energy takes off.”
19 Oct 22
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digitalguap · 1 year
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2023 Silver Price Forecast - PAIN
What's up YouTube Silver dragons here And in this video I want to talk about The big move in silver price we've seen Over the last month almost a three Dollar drop at the start of 2023 we Expected silver price to move lower that Is exactly what is happening so what I Want to do is talk about when I think Silver price is going to actually bottom When we're going to see silver price Stop moving…
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skrillnetwork · 4 days
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Silver Surges: ASX Mining Companies with High-Potential Silver Projects
 The silver market is shining bright, with prices reaching near-decade highs. Fueled by safe-haven demand, rising industrial applications, and positive analyst forecasts, silver presents a solid and lasting opportunity for investors. Read on to find out more about the top ASX mining companies with silver projects, along with the upcoming IPO of Sun Silver (ASX:SS1).
Why Invest in ASX Silver Miners?
Investing in ASX silver miners could be the future thanks to the data available to date. It attributes majorly to the price of silver being more than gold by almost 20%. Price hikes are expected to soar according to analysts, with various projections amounting to US$32 per ounce. Not to mention how this projection is to be attained by the following year, 2025.
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A graph depicting the 5 year prices of silver and gold
(Source: TradingView)
The other reason is the increase in demand for silver in recent times. Due to its various industrial uses in solar energy and electronics, people have begun to turn to this metal beyond just jewelry. The amount of silver used for solar needs has grown by 330% just over the last decade (2014 to 2023).
Top 4 ASX Mining Companies with Silver Projects
ASX boasts several promising silver mining companies. Here's a look at four of them to get a better understanding of the market:
Adriatic Metals Limited (ASX:ADT)
Market Capitalization: ~ $1.24 billion (as of April 25, 2024)
Share Price: A$4.20 (as of April 25, 2024)
Adriatic Metals (ASX:ADT) is focused on both developing and exploring precious and base metals. The company owns the world-class Vares Silver Project in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
One of the biggest milestones for this business was its mine launch on March 5, 2024. The Managing Director, Marko Komljenovic has over 20 years of experience in mining and a degree in geology. This has made him contribute significantly to mine development and financing.
Silver Mines Limited (ASX:SVL)
Market Capitalization: ~$271.4 million (as of April 25, 2024)
Share Price: A$0.18 (as of April 25, 2024)
Australia's Bowdens Silver Project, situated in New South Wales, is the main focus of Silver Mines’ (ASX:SVL) exploration and development business. It hasn't lately engaged in any significant capital raising or acquisitions but is boasting a high-grade silver resource with a recent discovery of a new high-grade zone in February 2024.
Anthony Royall is leading Silver Mines (ASX:SVL) as the Managing Director. He has over 20 years of expertise in mineral exploration and has held positions of senior ranks with other companies that work with resources in the past.
Investigator Resources Limited (ASX:IVR)
Market Capitalization: ~$83 million (as of April 25, 2024)
Share Price: A$0.053 (as of April 25, 2024)
Investigator Resources Limited (ASX:IVR) is a mineral exploration company with projects in South Australia focused on various metals, including silver. Investigator Resources (ASX:IVR) hasn't been a part of any significant acquisitions or capital raising lately.
Their main project is the MJ Hilgendorf Project, known for its copper-gold-silver potential. Steered by Andrew Leigh, the company is in able hands. This is thanks to Leigh’s background in geoscience and three decades of experience in mining.
Sun Silver (ASX:SS1) (IPO June 2024)
Market Capitalization: Pre-IPO
Share Price: A$0.20 per share at IPO
This emerging player is a highly anticipated newcomer seeking to raise $13 million for developing its Maverick Springs silver-gold project in Nevada, USA. Investors hoping to profit from the silver market have a fantastic opportunity with Sun Silver's (ASX:SS1) forthcoming IPO in June 2024.
Mr. O’Donovan, the Executive Director of Sun Silver (ASX:SS1), with nearly 17 years of experience, excels in exploration, mine development, and operations across various commodities. He led projects at Battery Age Minerals, Pilbara Minerals, and Rio Tinto, demonstrating success and expertise. Holding a Bachelor of Engineering (Hons), he has also pursued studies in Sustainability, Circular Economy & Social Governance.
With 80% of the property yet unexplored, Sun Silver’s (ASX:SS1) Maverick Springs project has a substantial exploration potential. It has an inferred resource of 292 million ounces of silver equivalent.
Reasons to be Bullish on Silver
The silver market outlook is positive, fueled by several factors:
1. ETF Inflows
Silver demand and investor mood can be best noted during ETFs (exchange traded funds). It is worth noting that the recent increase in silver prices has come along with major inflows of ETFs that track the metal. This shows that both institutional and individual investors are showing interest in silver.
This also shows us that the market as a whole believes that silver is a desirable option to invest in. The growth opportunities for the future are quite clearly visible and many people wish to get into it. ETFs also give investors an affordable way to handle changes in silver price, thereby contributing to its upward momentum.
2. Price Forecast
The majority of analysts from research companies and financial organizations are optimistic about silver's future. Furthermore, they even anticipate more growth in the years to come. Analysts agree that the upward trend for silver will give investors the confidence to cash in.
They can commit to various silver-related assets and positions. Furthermore, the idea that silver is a strong investment opportunity with substantial upside potential is strengthened by the ongoing revisions of price estimates upward.
3. Industrial Demand
The demand for quality silver hinges on its role in solar panels. It is used in photovoltaic cells  to capture solar energy. The demand for silver in this production will increase due to the growing global push towards renewable energy sources.
This spike in demand for solar installations has directly impacted the need for more silver. Silver is also used in other industrial fields. Some include:
Electronics
Automotive
Healthcare
The demand for silver in industrial applications is driven by technical developments, and its inherent worth as a versatile commodity is highlighted. One point of contention among analysts is whether or not silver will ever hit $100 USD an ounce.
While there are some projections indicating that silver may attain $32 USD per ounce by 2025, prominent industry players such as Keith Neumeyer, CEO of First Majestic Silver, maintain an even more optimistic stance. Neumeyer has stated in the open that he thinks silver will rise considerably higher—possibly to triple digits.
Neumeyer has a positive outlook that stems from multiple sources. He makes the argument that silver is due for a large price hike after years of trailing behind gold by citing the past cycles of precious metals. Reaching this number would need a certain combination of elements to come together.
Compared to gold, silver is a more erratic commodity, and changes in investor mood and the value of the US dollar can have a significant impact on its price. Although it's a good idea to remain optimistic, take this forecast with a grain of salt.
Final Thoughts
Silver's future is bright since prices are rising and demand is strong across a range of industries. To fully capitalize on the potential of the silver market, investors should consider combining their investments in well-established miners with stock in impending initial public offerings (IPOs) such as Sun Silver (ASX:SS1).
Read More updates on Mining News - https://skrillnetwork.com/topics/mining
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goldsilverreports · 2 years
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Silver Price Forecast: Technical Set-up Favors Bearish Traders
Silver Price Forecast: Technical Set-up Favors Bearish Traders
Silver Price Forecast: The technical set-up seems tilted firmly in favour of bearish traders and supports prospects for an extension of the ongoing depreciating move for the silver (White Metal). Hence, a subsequent slide below the $21.00 mark, towards challenging the YTD low around the $20.45 area touched on May 13, now looks like a distinct possibility. (more…)
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spookysaladchaos · 6 days
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Global Top 27 Companies Accounted for 47% of total Gems and Jewelry market (QYResearch, 2021)
Gem, which is also called Jewel, normally refers to a precious mineral crystal or stone that is cut into good looking shape and also polished for use as an ornament. However, some organic materials, such as amber and pearl, are also classified as gemstone. Gem is used to make jewelry or other adornments. Jewelry is defined as personal ornaments such as necklaces, rings, or bracelets that could be made from gems and precious metal, including gold, silver and platinum.
In this report, Gems and Jewelry are classified into four categories, which are Gold Jewelry, Diamond Jewelry, Platinum Jewelry and Others (mainly Gems, Semi-precious Stone, Pearl and Jadeite). The main reason of this classification is that the market share of gold, diamond and platinum basically account for the majority of Gems and Jewelry market. Other Jewelry, such as gem, which probably could have higher price but do not have big market volume due to its rarity and less public acceptance compared to those three main types, are integrated into one type. More detailed analysis based on this classification, including sales volume, revenue and price will be presented in later sections.
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According to the new market research report “Global Gems and Jewelry Market Report 2023-2029”, published by QYResearch, the global Gems and Jewelry market size is projected to reach USD 255.8 billion by 2029, at a CAGR of 8.1% during the forecast period.
Figure.   Global Gems and Jewelry Market Size (US$ Million), 2018-2029
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Above data is based on report from QYResearch: Global Gems and Jewelry Market Report 2023-2029 (published in 2023). If you need the latest data, plaese contact QYResearch..
Figure.   Global Gems and Jewelry Top 27 Players Ranking and Market Share (Ranking is based on the revenue of 2022, continually updated)
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Above data is based on report from QYResearch: Global Gems and Jewelry Market Report 2023-2029 (published in 2023). If you need the latest data, plaese contact QYResearch.
The global key manufacturers of Gems and Jewelry include Richemont, Chow Tai Fook, Rajesh Exports, LVMH, Lao Feng Xiang, Signet Jewellers, Titan, Malabar Gold and Diamonds, Pandora, Gitanjali Gems, etc. In 2022, the global top 10 players had a share approximately 47.0% in terms of revenue.
About QYResearch
QYResearch founded in California, USA in 2007.It is a leading global market research and consulting company. With over 16 years’ experience and professional research team in various cities over the world QY Research focuses on management consulting, database and seminar services, IPO consulting, industry chain research and customized research to help our clients in providing non-linear revenue model and make them successful. We are globally recognized for our expansive portfolio of services, good corporate citizenship, and our strong commitment to sustainability. Up to now, we have cooperated with more than 60,000 clients across five continents. Let’s work closely with you and build a bold and better future.
QYResearch is a world-renowned large-scale consulting company. The industry covers various high-tech industry chain market segments, spanning the semiconductor industry chain (semiconductor equipment and parts, semiconductor materials, ICs, Foundry, packaging and testing, discrete devices, sensors, optoelectronic devices), photovoltaic industry chain (equipment, cells, modules, auxiliary material brackets, inverters, power station terminals), new energy automobile industry chain (batteries and materials, auto parts, batteries, motors, electronic control, automotive semiconductors, etc.), communication industry chain (communication system equipment, terminal equipment, electronic components, RF front-end, optical modules, 4G/5G/6G, broadband, IoT, digital economy, AI), advanced materials industry Chain (metal materials, polymer materials, ceramic materials, nano materials, etc.), machinery manufacturing industry chain (CNC machine tools, construction machinery, electrical machinery, 3C automation, industrial robots, lasers, industrial control, drones), food, beverages and pharmaceuticals, medical equipment, agriculture, etc.
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pricevisionai · 1 year
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Difference Between Commodity Market and Stock Market
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The market provides a wide range of assets where people can invest their unused funds to make money. Investors seeking strong returns typically invest in either equities or commodities, which are two different asset classes. Stocks signify ownership in a corporation, whereas commodities are items like metals, energy, and agricultural products. Both of these asset groups have substantial potential for profit. They are exchanged, nonetheless, on various markets. Therefore, before investing in either, it is crucial to understand the differences between the stock market and the commodity market.
By inexperienced investors, the phrases stock market & commodity market are frequently used interchangeably. Even so, there are several key distinctions between the two that might guide your choice of investment. The distinctions between these two markets, if you're novice to investing, will become clearer as your wealth increases. Nevertheless, even seasoned investors occasionally succumb to the parallels between equities and commodities. There are certain distinctions between them, though, and we'll discuss those in this post. If you're not familiar with how the stock market operates, you might want to review the fundamentals before going any further.
Stock Exchange
It alludes to a group of stock exchanges where shares are bought, sold, and traded. As was already established, stocks represent a company's ownership. These are best understood as components of the total equity of a corporation. Each business understands only Rs. 1000 of a company's total equity if its capital is worth Rs. 1000 crores and there are 1 crore shares. One share of stock entitles the holder to only that fraction of the company's ownership.
The value of one's holding regularly varies with adjustments in the statement of financial position, driven about by a multiplicity of circumstances, both internally and externally. Depending on their investing goals, a person may decide to sell their stocks the same day they are purchased, a year later, or even 10 years later.
The stock market, which has numerous exchanges within it, is the market that makes it possible to purchase and sell. In the Indian stock market, there really are two primary stock exchanges -
●            National Stock Exchange
●            Bombay Stock Exchange
Individuals must have a trade and DEMAT account in order to invest in equities listed on either of these markets or others.
Commodity Market
It is a commodity market, as the name would imply. These products fall into two categories:
●            Hard commodities
●            Soft commodities
The former speaks of products that are mined and extracted, such as crude gold and oil. These are 2 of the most valuable and traded commodities on the planet. Rice, wheat, eggs, pigs, cattle, and other agricultural commodity and livestock items are included in the latter group. Comparatively speaking to hard goods, these often have a significantly shorter lifespan.
These products can be bought, sold, and traded in commodity markets. The trading process is one of the comparisons between commodities and stocks. The majority of dealers that trade commodities do so using futures contracts. These agreements bind the parties to carry out a transaction at the agreed-upon price and on the agreed-upon date. Futures contracts are frequently used by manufacturers and farmers as a hedge against possible losses. These, nevertheless, also serve as a remarkable tool for realising a profit.
A person may decide to invest immediately in commodities. To that goal, India has six commodity exchanges:
●            Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX)
●            Ace Derivatives Exchange (ACE)
●            The Universal Commodity Exchange (UCX)
●            National Multi Commodity Exchange (NMCE)
●            Indian Commodity Exchange (ICEX)
●            National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange (NCDEX)
What distinguishes the commodity market from the stock market?
Analyzing the influence of various economic elements on each market is crucial if one wants to clearly comprehend the differences between both the stock market or commodity market.
●            Inflation
A rising tendency in the prices of almost all items in an economy is referred to as inflation. Inflation typically happens along with rising consumer income. The former does, however, occasionally surpass the latter.
A commodity market flourishes in an inflationary environment because as raw material costs rise, a growing number of investors turn to those markets. As a result, the cost of manufactured items rises, which lowers consumption. It spirals into subpar performance across numerous industries, causing the stock market to move downward. It's one of the key distinctions between the stock market and the commodity market.
●            US dollar's value
The impact of USD on gold is extremely pronounced. The value of gold is inversely correlated to the US dollar. Typically, when the USD is performing poorly, investors look to gold as a safe haven. On the other hand, if the US currency strengthens, investors are less likely to like it.
In other instances, as in the most recent recession that shook the market in late February, this propensity for gold also correlates with such a disinterest in the stock market. Before choosing to invest in either, it is essential to understand the differences between the stock market and the commodity market. In order to make an informed choice in these marketplaces, it's crucial to analyze the possibilities available.
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lalsingh228-blog · 20 days
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Antimicrobial Additives Market Projected to Show Strong Growth
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Global Antimicrobial Additives Market Report from AMA Research highlights deep analysis on market characteristics, sizing, estimates and growth by segmentation, regional breakdowns & country along with competitive landscape, player’s market shares, and strategies that are key in the market. The exploration provides a 360° view and insights, highlighting major outcomes of the industry. These insights help the business decision-makers to formulate better business plans and make informed decisions to improved profitability. In addition, the study helps venture or private players in understanding the companies in more detail to make better informed decisions. Major Players in This Report Include, BASF SE (Germany), The Dow Chemical Company (United States), LyondellBasell Industries Holdings B.V. (United States), RTP Company (United States), Addmaster Limited (United Kingdom), Biocote Limited (United Kingdom), Microban International (United States), Clariant AG (Switzerland), Polyone Corporation (United States), Momentive Performance Materials Inc. (United States). Free Sample Report + All Related Graphs & Charts @: https://www.advancemarketanalytics.com/sample-report/41292-global-antimicrobial-additives-market Antimicrobial additives inhibit the growth of microorganisms in the end products. Antimicrobial additives possess properties such as chemical stability, heat & chemical resistance, and high dimensional stability. Growing population and urbanization are likely to escalate the demand for antimicrobial additives over the forecast period owing to rapidly expanding end-use sectors. Furthermore, the continuously increasing demand for packaging and healthcare products to tackle the COVID-19 pandemic will positively impact market growth. The Asia Pacific is expected to dominate the market as the region has some of the major healthcare product manufacturers. Market Drivers
High Demand for Advanced Healthcare Services across the Globe
Growing Awareness about Health-Related Issues among Consumers
Increasing Use of Silver-Based Products as Antimicrobial Additives
Market Trend
Technological Advancements in the Chemical Industries
Opportunities
Untapped Opportunities for the Use of Antimicrobial Additives in Agriculture and Cosmetics Industry
Strong Growth Opportunities in Emerging Markets
Challenges
Fluctuating Raw Material Prices
Enquire for customization in Report @: https://www.advancemarketanalytics.com/enquiry-before-buy/41292-global-antimicrobial-additives-market In this research study, the prime factors that are impelling the growth of the Global Antimicrobial Additives market report have been studied thoroughly in a bid to estimate the overall value and the size of this market by the end of the forecast period. The impact of the driving forces, limitations, challenges, and opportunities has been examined extensively. The key trends that manage the interest of the customers have also been interpreted accurately for the benefit of the readers. The Antimicrobial Additives market study is being classified by Type (Organic (OBPA, DCOIT), Inorganic (Silver, Copper, Zinc)), Application (Plastics, Paints & Coatings, Pulp & Paper, Others), Industry Verticals (Healthcare, Food & Beverage, Packaging, Automotive, Textile, Others (Consumer Goods, Construction)), Distribution Channel (Direct, Indirect) The report concludes with in-depth details on the business operations and financial structure of leading vendors in the Global Antimicrobial Additives market report, Overview of Key trends in the past and present are in reports that are reported to be beneficial for companies looking for venture businesses in this market. Information about the various marketing channels and well-known distributors in this market was also provided here. This study serves as a rich guide for established players and new players in this market. Get Reasonable Discount on This Premium Report @ https://www.advancemarketanalytics.com/request-discount/41292-global-antimicrobial-additives-market Extracts from Table of Contents Antimicrobial Additives Market Research Report Chapter 1 Antimicrobial Additives Market Overview Chapter 2 Global Economic Impact on Industry Chapter 3 Global Market Competition by Manufacturers Chapter 4 Global Revenue (Value, Volume*) by Region Chapter 5 Global Supplies (Production), Consumption, Export, Import by Regions Chapter 6 Global Revenue (Value, Volume*), Price* Trend by Type Chapter 7 Global Market Analysis by Application ………………….continued This report also analyzes the regulatory framework of the Global Markets Antimicrobial Additives Market Report to inform stakeholders about the various norms, regulations, this can have an impact. It also collects in-depth information from the detailed primary and secondary research techniques analyzed using the most efficient analysis tools. Based on the statistics gained from this systematic study, market research provides estimates for market participants and readers. Contact US : Craig Francis (PR & Marketing Manager) AMA Research & Media LLP Unit No. 429, Parsonage Road Edison, NJ New Jersey USA – 08837 Phone: +1 201 565 3262, +44 161 818 8166 [email protected]
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