Moriarty's Now Buying Gold
If your looking to sell your old gold jewelry, coins and scrap, MOriarty's is now buying gold. Stop by our store to get an estimate on your gold pieces or contact us now!
Call Steve at 1-800-348-4499 or visit us at:
Moriarty's Gem Art
126 South Main St. (around the square in Crown Point)
Crown Point, IN 46037
CNN Story on the New Gold Rush!
CHICAGO, Illinois (AP) -- A new kind of gold rush is unfolding at jewelry store and pawn shop counters -- featuring not prospectors, but consumers.
Richard Rozhko, owner of Howard Jewelry in Chicago, shows gold items that customers have sold to him in recent weeks. undefined
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White-collar workers, retirees and many others have been digging through jewelry boxes and safety deposit boxes to cash in as gold prices flirt with $1,000 an ounce. Coins, old wedding rings, necklaces given by ex-boyfriends, hand-me-down gold pieces -- everything is fair game when it brings this kind of profit.
Shop owners across the country are marveling 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 jewelry.
"Everybody's trying to sell," said Richard Rozhko, owner of a jewelry 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 overinflated tech stock.
"When I saw the prices going through the roof, I saw it as an amazing opportunity to rid myself of jewelry 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."