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Perth Mint: Strong sales and price swings define October for precious metals
The Perth Mint sold 85,603 troy ounces (oz) of gold and 1,061,231 oz of silver in minted product form during October 2025. Opening the month around USD 3,850, gold rallied sharply in early October, breaking through the key USD 4,000 barrier to hit an all-time high of around USD 4,380 on 17 October. The rally was driven by renewed US-China trade tensions, the debasement trade effect, and expectations of upcoming US interest rate cuts – all of which fuelled unprecedented investment demand. Late in the month, however, gold experienced its sharpest sell-off since 2020, falling more than 5% as tensions eased and ... (full story)
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- From prnewswire.com|Nov 5, 2025|33 comments
Economic activity in the services sector returned to expansion in October, say the nation's purchasing and supply executives in the latest ISM® Services PMI® Report. The Services PMI® registered at 52.4 percent and is in expansion territory for the eighth time in 2025. The report was issued today by Steve Miller, CPSM, CSCP, Chair of the Institute for Supply Management® (ISM®) Services Business Survey Committee: "In October, the Services PMI® registered a reading of 52.4 percent, 2.4 percentage points higher than the September figure of 50 percent. The Business Activity Index also returned to expansion territory in October, registering 54.3 percent, 4.4 percentage points higher than the reading of 49.9 percent recorded in September. The New Orders Index remained in expansion in October, with a reading of 56.2 percent, up 5.8 percent from September's figure of 50.4 percent and its highest reading since October 2024 (56.7 percent). The Employment Index contracted for the fifth month in a row with a reading of 48.2 percent, a 1-percentage point improvement from the 47.2 percent recorded in September. US ISM Services Index Oct: 52.4 (est 50.8; prev 50.0) - Prices Paid: 70.0 (est 68.0; prev 69.4) - New Orders: 56.2 (est 51.0; prev 50.4) - Employment: 48.2 (est 47.6; prev 47.2)
ISM: US services sector rises in October Economic activity in the United States' services sector continued to grow in October, the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) revealed in its report published on Wednesday. Compared to the previous month, the Services Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) went from 50% to 52.4%. The Business Activity Index increased from 49.9% to 54.3%. The Employment Index remained in contraction, but improved slightly, going from 47.2% to 48.2%. The New Orders Index continued to expand from 50.4% to 56.2%. The Supplier Deliveries Index worsened from 52.6% to 50.8% "The rebounds in both the Business Activity and New Orders indexes in October are positive signs, while the continued contraction in the Employment index shows a lack of confidence in the continued strength of the economy," Business Survey Committee Chair Steve Miller commented.
From pmi.spglobal.com|Nov 5, 2025Latest PMI® survey data from S&P Global showed that the US service sector registered a solid and accelerated pace of activity growth during October. Higher service sector output ...
From channelnewsasia.com|Nov 5, 2025|1 commentThe world should watch out for three possible bubbles in financial markets, including artificial intelligence, the head of the World Economic Forum said on Wednesday, in comments ...
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From cnbc.com|Nov 5, 2025|1 commentThe Supreme Court on Wednesday morning began hearing oral arguments in a case to decide the fate of the cornerstone of President Donald Trump’s aggressive trade policy: Broad and ...
From newyorkfed.org|Nov 5, 2025The Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Center for Microeconomic Data today issued its Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit. The report shows total household debt increased by $197 billion (1%) in Q3 2025, to $18.59 trillion. The report is based on data from the New York Fed’s nationally representative Consumer Credit Panel. It includes a one-page summary of key takeaways and their supporting data points. “Household debt balances are growing at a moderate pace, with delinquency rates stabilizing,” said Donghoon Lee, Economic Research Advisor at the New York Fed. “The relatively low mortgage delinquency rates reflect the housing market’s resilience, driven by ample home equity and tight underwriting standards.” Mortgage balances grew by $137 billion in the third quarter and totaled $13.07 trillion at the end of September 2025. Credit card balances rose by $24 billion from the previous quarter and stood at $1.23 trillion. Auto loan balances held steady at $1.66 trillion. Home equity line of credit (HELOC) balances rose by $11 billion to $422 billion. Student loan balances rose by $15 billion and stood at $1.65 trillion. In total, non-housing balances rose by $49 billion, a 1.0% increase from Q2 2025. The pace of mortgage originations increased with $512 billion newly originated in Q3 2025. There was $184 billion in new auto loans and leases appearing on credit reports during the third quarter, a small dip from the $188 billion ob *NEW YORK FED RELEASES QUARTERLY REPORT ON US HOUSEHOLD DEBT *US CONSUMER DEBT IN DELINQUENCY RISES TO HIGHEST SINCE Q1 2020 *US STUDENT-LOAN DEBT BECOMING DELINQUENT RISES TO RECORD 14.4%
From @financialjuice|Nov 5, 2025|5 commentsFed's Miran: Better-than-expected ADP data was a welcome surprise. Fed's Miran: Job market data indicates interest rates could be lower than current levels. Fed's Miran: Still sees the labour demand not as strong as we want. Fed's Miran: Most of my projections aren't that different from others. Fed's Miran: I want to get to the destination for rates faster than others.
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- Nov 5, 2025 9:10am Posted byFundamental Analysis279
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