GOLD BULLION regained the last of this week's prior 1.3% loss against a weakening US Dollar in London trade Thursday, as other markets whipped amid uncertainty on the path of US interest rates following yesterday's release of notes from the Federal Reserve's latest policy meeting.
Holding rates unchanged on 1 November, but signalling a rate-hike will come in December,
minutes from the Fed meeting showed policy-makers split over the strength of inflation and thus the need to raise further in 2018.
The Dollar meantime sank at its fastest pace in 5 months, helping gold bullion recover last Friday's finish at $1292 per ounce, but gold priced in all other major currencies held lower for the week so far.
Crypto-currency Bitcoin meantime traded 1.7% below Tuesday's fresh all-time high at $8347, some 11-fold higher for 2017 to date.
"The idea is to take profits from Bitcoin as it advances to reinvest in gold and silver assets," Bloomberg quotes fund manager Ned Naylor-Leyland.
Shares in Riot Blockchain (Nasdaq:RIOT) – a biotech company since 2000 until switching to distributed record-keeping technology this October – meantime rose 42% on Wednesday, nearly doubling the stock's price from this time last week.
Trading as Bioptix, the company made multi-million dollar losses every year since at least 2012,
according to data from MarketWatch.
Its stock-price doubled in the week prior to 4 October, when it announced the change.
"The company has
exploded into popularity on investing social media forums," says stock-tip research site Zacks.com, "[but] for many, Riot's [new] business model is still relatively unclear."
"We want to use blockchain to optimize the antiquated arena of commodity trade finance," writes French investment bank Natixis' head of global energy and commodities-trade & structured finance in the Americas, Arnaud Stevens, today.
With US investment banks Goldman Sachs and J.P.Morgan meantime "remaking financial services" with a successful 6-month trial of a centralized ledger for equity swaps, "The most impressive trick that blockchain-in-banking advocates have performed," writes Bloomberg columnist Matt Levine, "is getting the world to pay attention to
back-office technology upgrades, and to think that they might be revolutionary."