|
ALL THAT GLITTERS IS SOLD
TheStar.com | Business | Consumers in a rush to cash
in as gold price nears $1,000 U.S. Consumers in a rush to cash in as gold price nears
$1,000 U.S. PAUL BEATY/AP PHOTO Richard Rozhko, owner of Howard Jewellery in Chicago,
shows some gold items customers have sold to him.
Pawnshops and jewellers say some Americans are selling
gold trinkets to cope with tough times. From medals to chains, almost any trinket is now fair
game for sale Mar 12, 2008 04:30 AM Associated Press CHICAGO-A new kind of gold rush is unfolding at
jewellery store and pawnshop counters - featuring not
prospectors, but consumers. White-collar workers, retirees and many others have
been digging through jewellery boxes and safety deposit
boxes to cash in as gold prices flirt with $1,000 (U.S.)
an ounce. Coins, old wedding rings, necklaces given by
ex-boyfriends, hand-me-down gold pieces - everything is
fair game these days. Shop owners across the United States are marvelling
about the phenomenon they say began in the latter part
of 2007 and accelerated through the winter, reflecting
torrid gold demand like none had ever seen. There are
even gold parties, where people gather to sell their
jewellery. "Everybody's trying to sell," said Richard Rozhko,
owner of a jewellery store on the northern edge of
Chicago. "People are trying to cash out because they
don't believe that gold's going to go higher than $1,000
or $1,200" an ounce. Rachel Weingarten, a New Yorker with a self-described
obsession with "shiny trinkets," didn't need to sell but
couldn't resist the chance when she saw prices soar like
an over inflated tech stock. "When I saw the prices going through the roof, I saw
it as an amazing opportunity to rid myself of jewellery
that no longer suits my taste or status," said
Weingarten, a marketing consultant. ``It's also been a
lot of fun to get cash for stuff that is broken or just
really ugly or just takes up room in my drawers.'' Folks are catching gold fever in Toronto too. "People are selling gold because they believe it's at
an all-time high," Alec Van Rijk, a long-time jewellery
dealer on Eglinton Ave. just east of Yonge St., told the Toronto Star's Lisa Wright. Yesterday he bought a 23-ounce gold bar from a
customer for $21,100. "I think the minute it hits $1,000 an ounce it will
light a spark for more (prospective customers) to come
out of the woodwork," he says, although he doesn't get
the sense that things are as crazy as they were back
during gold's last bull run. "People were lining up to sell their gold back in
1979. I think people today are thinking it's going to go
up further," Van Rijk added. Maurice Aron, another buyer out of Maurice Ltd. on
Cumberland St., said he's seeing an increase in business
not only from people wanting to sell but also to buy his
jewellery, thinking it's going to double in the near
future to $2,000 an ounce. "We're buying a lot of coins and medallions, chains
and broken rings, which we send to the melters. But
we're also selling a lot too," Aron noted. "People are also holding on to their gold because
they realize it's a hedge against inflation, and it's a
good investment," he added. Gold futures for April delivery rose $4.20, or 0.4
per cent, to $976 an ounce on the Comex division of the
New York Mercantile Exchange. On March 5, the price
reached $995.20, the highest ever for a most-active
contract. Meanwhile Royal Pawn Shop, a 75-year-old business
within earshot of the rattle of passing El trains in
Chicago's South Loop, has display cases sporting fancy
gold rings, bracelets and watches along with racks
holding hundreds of pawned fur coats. It also has more
office workers as customers these days - mostly sellers,
not buyers, bringing in gold chains and rings. "It's stuff that's lying around the house, so they
figure: Why not make money from it?" said co-owner Wayne
Cohen. "The price of gold is so ridiculously high that
they'd be stupid not to get rid of it.'' Others are selling to help cope with tough times in
an economic
slowdown. |